td * a PBI STORY,” ye account itiac Press. Sy DON WHITEHEAD Banker William -K. Hale returned home from the annual Texas Fat Cattle Show to find his home town of Fairfax, Okid., gripped by excitement . . . and fear. As he walked up Main street from the railway station, his friends stopped to tell him the news. , A few people who happened to be up and about at 3 o’clock that morning had seen a sheet of flame engulf the Bill Smith home—and ripped the big house apart. “,... Killed Rita and the maid and Bill's dying . « « blew ‘em to hell and gone . . . not much left of then heard the blast that the house but a pile of kindlin’ wood.” This was Osage County, Oklahoma, a dark and bloody} senting his $71,800,000,000 hunting ground if ever there was one. And the craftiest| budget, urged postal rate hunter of them all in this oil and Indian kingdom was William K. Hale, banker, cattleman, merchant, politi- cian and killer-by- proxy. Sa eam in oy (for Continu folowing. article ig the ninth tie series of daly tory of the Federal Bureau of Inv Whitehead’: new taoke “THE appear each day inthe pages of The Pon Legislation Want - List of Interest Rates WASHINGTON (?)—Pres- ident Eisenhower today handed Corigress his 1957 want-list of legislation, high tax rates, higher in- terest charges on govern- ment-sponsored loans, and ‘a natural gas bill like the one he vetoed last year. The President, in pre- increase that would boost the cost of a 3-cent stamp | to a nickel. Throughout the Roaring Twenties, there was no stranger case than that of Hale, who became known as| “King of the Osage Hills.”+ Before the turn of the! century, Bill Hale had left his family’s ranch near Greenville, Tex., and drift- ed into the “bandit hills” of Osage County. He lived in a tent for a time, scratching out a living by trading! with the Indians. One day Hale went to collect a small bill from an Indian cus- tomer, only te find the man had just died. This wasn't mis- fortune for Hale—it was oppor- Your Share Is $422.10 . WASHINGTON (INS) —There were 169,761,110 persons in the U. S. when President Eisenhower's budget message was delivered to Congress today. The. President ‘asked for $71,- 807,000,000 to spend in the 1958! fiscal year,-which turns out to be) $422.10 for each man, woman and! child. tunity knocking for the first time. Tr) Todary’s Press Hale saw a lawyer and arranged to have a lien filed agalnst almost the Indian had owned, including. larid, cattle one kamse- hold possessions. It was sheer robbery,. but out of the badlands came Hale's: friends to swear the Indian right- fully owed Hale the money. There wasn't a shred of documentary proof to support the claim; but Hale won the case. EASY AFTER THAT After that it was easy. Rarely County News iveevds veve 38 Editorials ........¢..6se0e0s 6 Pot-O’-Gold .... 6.6... .4 0005 il “Sporty o.oo. ccc cenee 29, 30, 31 Theaters... 0.0.0... .6.5.050- 32 TV & Radio Programs ..... 39 Wilson, Earl ............... 99 Women's Pages 21. thru 27 | He also called for a full speed ‘ahead on federal aid .for ‘‘schools, highways and homes.” ; Seeretary of the Treasury Humphrey said the rising budget -trend “should promptly be | stopped.” He told reporters he | | would be “giad” if Congress could find any unnecessary costs ‘it could eliminate. He emphasized, however, that he was not criticizing the Presi- jdent’s budget, commenting, ithe best we can possibly do right jnow.”" But he added that if all hands go to work, it can be whit- tled down before the fiscal year ends in mid-1958 Then Humphrey made some leg- islative disclosures of his own: 1. The Treasury may ask Con- gress to boost the interest rate on U.S. Savings Bonds, now paying 3 per cent if held 10 years. 2, The Treasury will fight ‘‘any which reduce revenues (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) to Circulate in Waterford did an Indian die that there wasn’t a claim of some kind against his! property, filed either by Hale or| by some other white man. Then came the dehige of wealth] Committee on Incorporation met last night and decided to circulate petitions throughout the township to begin for Osage County. Drillers struck| . oil and almost overnight the Osage \ ment to some 2,200 full-blooded Indians became the richest people per capital on earth. By reason of the “head rights” granted. by the federal govern- Osage Indians, they were eligible to share the royalties paid on each gallon of oii pumped from. their reservation. When an ‘Osage died, his ‘“‘head right’’ was passed on to his heirs. Bill Hale prospered as the Indians prospered. By 1920 the one-time cowpoke had moved from his tent in the badlands into con- trol of a 50,000-acre ranch stocked with cattle and fine horses. x * * He controlled a bank in Fairfax, and owned part interest in a Members of the Waterford Township Taxpayers Study incorporation proceedings. After more than a year’ group..feels that incorporation in the near future s study and research, the| would give the township*+ more power to solve the imminent problems that are bouhd to occur in an area of rapid growth such as Waterford Township, a spokesman said. There are many..advantagés and disadvantages of incorporation, ac- cording to Louis Schimmel, munici- pal finance expert, However, he has advised the study committee ito go ahead and “‘feel the pulse” of the community -by circulating petitions, President_of the incorporation study group, Dave Hertler, 414 ‘Airport Rd. said, “Members of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) the committee feel that Water- terd Township has grown to a Size that it is faced with prob- lems which could be solved by a home-rule city form of govern- @& ment. Twenty-five businessmen and women make up the Taxpayers Study Committee. on Incorporation which was sponsored by the Junior Chamber of Commerté and the Business and Professional Women's Clubs of Waterford Township. According to Hertler, it would be too late to get the incorporation issue on the primary or spring ballot. It would have to be a special election if placed on the Includes the Boosting boa topped by a renewal of| 3. If prosperity endures and gov-/Scotched through an array* manager, sald the program was part of the firm's record 1957 expenditure of $95,000,000 to serve one million customers in 64 Mich- igan counties; The division encompasses 790 square miles and includes Pon- tiac, Birmingham, Royal Oak, Rochester, Ferndale, Mt. Clem- ens, East Detroit, Livonia, Wayne, Plymouth, and more than 100 other communities. The division's expansion will call for the installation of . more than 300 miles of new gas mains to take care of an anticipated 19,- 000 new customers during the com- ming year, Gerhard said. DUE TO AREA GROWTH. The m is made necessary, he said, by ‘“‘the rapidly expanding region where both industrial and Pes an vers pore It will house the division offices formerly located in Pontiac, as well as the service center for the South Oakland District. In Pontiac, the expansion of substation facilities in 1957 to and improved power in the west + side of the city highlights the year’s program locally, A new be installed at East boulevard and Featherstone. Others in the area will go up at Orchard Lake and 12. Mile. road. in Farmington Township, at 14 Mile ‘road and Custer in Clawson, and ‘at Woofl- ward Heights boulevard and John R in Hazel. Park. Division building improvement projects include work on the yard Lecturer Tells of Need for Freedom of Commerce dinner that Dr. Kenneth McFarland, McFarland Talks fo 500 at Annual Chamber Dinner well-read, well-versed lecturing humorist left no doubt in: the minds of some 500 men and women attending’ last night’s annual Pontiac Area Chamber he js one of the 10 most sought-after speakers in the country. educational consultant and and all" tax-cutting proposals/ Jecturer for eight years with General. Motors Corp., hop- of introductory anecdotes - land jokes to speak of the Incorporation Petitions ineed of freedom in modern society. Borrowing from a New Zealand girl, the balding and silver-haired ispeaker left the crowd with her’ idefinition of freedom being right for as many people as pos-| sible to be as happy as they can.’ Prior to the speech, Dr. George N. Petroff, retiring 1956 Chamber president, presented the presi- dent’s Zavel to incoming presi- dent Howard O, Powers, Dr. and Mrs. Petroff were- pre- sented with a portable television set from members of the Chamber. Powers introduced to the per- sons that had gathered at the Elks Temple, his fellow officers for 1957. They were: John A. Riley, first vice president; B. Ralph Eastridge, second vice president; Robert W. Emerick, secretary; and Stuart E. Whitfield, treasurer. Continuing his speech, Dr, Me- Farland, who has appeared be- fere one million persons in his numerous talks across the coun- try, stressed his philosophy of the “right to be uncommon people.” Emphasizing the religious role ballot, Hertler said. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) “the! killed instantly early this morning Royal Oak Executive Henry Mouw Killed Henry W. Mouw, 50, president of the Royal Oak Tool and Machine Co., Royal Oak Township, was *\when he crashed his car into a culvert at a Southfield Township intersection. A resident of 1065 Timberlake Rd., ‘Bloomfield Township, Mouw was pronounced dead at the scene with fractures of. the skull and neck and internal injuries. . Investigating Oakland County deputies were unable to explain how the accident at 13 Mile and Bingham roads occurred. They reported Mouw’s 1956 Cadillac went off the right side of the highway before striking the culvert heation. Deputies said the road was clear. Invite sti Glee Club EAST LANSING (#%—The Michi- gan State University Men's Glee the inauguration of President. Ei- senhower, 7 la Prepared Tax Consultant T Angus Cam; 905 W. Huron St., Open Eves. FE 2-3615' posal ‘ Ye ag SRO rT “Pla provide for increased capacity |* gas regulator station will) Se ee a See eee ans _ facilities a the Pontiae and Mt. Clemeng setvice centers, and the completion of the expansion at the South Macomb service center at East Detroit, = Expect Warrant Against Suspect in Rape-Slaying Singer Signs Admission in Death of Gillespie; Police Cautious FROM OUR WIRE SERVICES DETROIT — A warrant of JoAnn Gillespie. Thomas Cochill said that a, first degree murder warrant’ against 38-year-old .Philip| today or tomorrow. The bearded, former Marine signed a_ formal) statement Monday night| in detail. is the man. Some 14 so-called con- fessione to the crime have already been found to be false. Singer, his hands shaking, met | ‘with newsmen yesterday in the sewing reom of the women’s de- tention section of police head- quarters. It was his first. meeting with newsmen since he was picked up Saturday night on a charge of in-; decent exposure, BLAMES BLACKOUT He told hig news conference that the crime could be blamed on a beer the night of the crime, But Singer told newsmen that after the crime, “It never both- ered me. It never seemed nat- ural it happened." He said he had no idga what was on his mind that night and “I wouldn’t hurt anyone to save’ my soul,’ WASN’T DEAD Singer told newsmen he didn't know what he hit her with, but turned and ran from the scene. \sisted today that the confessed slayer spent the night with | her} Club has been invited to sing atithe night of the killing. Ca Newpeorts will be closed Thers- ready, Mark down goods and ure ‘help _— our big $200,000 stock dis- may come today in the four-year-old rape-slaying| Homicide Inspector J. Singer would be asked| which Detective Glen Col- ler said admitted the crime “blackout from an ulcer” he said —— he got through the war. He said he had also had 12 to 14 bottles of that she wasn't dead when he A 35-year-old Detroit barmaid in-! narung Woe : Music Pauses— Toscanini Dies World - Famed Leader) of Great Orchestras 90. Next March | NEW YORK (INS) — Renowned conductor Arturo Toscanini die® in ‘his ‘sleep today in his Riverdale home in the Bronx at the age of /90, -{Commerce Board Royal oc ‘to Be Suggested on to Supervisors ~~ “Chamber ‘of Comaarce’ + of Area City ca Possible. Change. The Oakland cial Bi [Board of Supervisors will be asked tomorrow to con- sider shifting the county seat from Pontiac to Royal Oak. Asurprise resolution, unanimously passed by the Royal Oak Chantber of. f Direc: tors, will be offéfed today for submission tomorrow at ithe supervisors’ meeting, Chamber manager, Roland Powers, said. -It calls for shifting the county seat, Powers said, because the “majority .of the county population lives in the southern half of the county.” It also is being submitted, he said, because of dissatisfaction over delays in constructing a new courthouse in Pontiac. The resolution, he pointed out, only asks supervisors to “consid- aft the change,” It does not ask, Wie said, for a county-wide elec: tion which would be necessary to move the county seat, Toscanini, who retired as con- ductor of the National Broadcast- ing Company's Symphony of the | Air three years ago, was stricken “If this. plan gets rolling, though,"”” Powers said, “I think all the cities in the southern portion jot iy county would get solidly be- it, jm Jan. 1 after attending a New! No specific courthouse site in Year's party, Since that time he has suffered a series of strokes. maestro would have been 00 But police officers are treading) Ye@rs old on March 2%, lightly, although Coller. said he) sj hore at the oy lta” that his at time of Tos- canini's death at 8:40 a.m, (EST) were his daughters, Wally, the | Countess of Castelbarco, and Wan- da, the wife of noted pianist Viad- mie Horowitz, |. ‘Sage’ Foresees Prince MONTE. CARLO (INS) — Mon- aco’s only fortune teller predicted | will be a boy. The old gypsy added jtoday that Princess Grace's baby) Royal Oak is suggested by the res- ‘olution, Powers said, nor is one of- ficially planned at this time, PASSED MONDAY The Chamber passed the resolu- tion Monday, Powers said; and will instruct him today how it will be introduced tomorrow, He did not know whether the Chamber will ask him to have a member of the Board of Supervisors introduce the resolution. “A county seat in Royal Oak would be more convenient for the largest part of the population, And then we've got to get something doné ‘about the new courthouse. If it were to be located in Royal Oak, I think we could get started on it right away,” Powers said, that the little prince will have sev- eral sisters fo play with within a few years, The northern boundry of Royal Oak at Woodwartl avenue Is at 4 12 p.m. 11 5 a.m. lam, 8 8 a.m. Zam. 7 9 am. Pentiac and the eastern half the icy grip of winter today, as trigid lows, Hopes of a warm break in the Sunday or Monday, experts said. Long, Low Freeze TODAY’S TEMPERATURES (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) 7 10 am. 4 6 12 m. 10 4 1 p.m. 11, of the nation remained locked in thermometers continued to dip to cold ‘snap are dismal, with a five - day forecast predicting temperatures 18 degrees below the normal jmaximum of 33 and minimum of 19. | A possible break from the near-zero weather may arrive around Tomorrow will. be cloudy with continued cold and light snow in the afternoon; flurries continuing into the evening, the U.S. forecast said. | Heavy snow warnings have been given for New England, and set corsprintes at Boonville. imuch of New York state is still recovering from the 55-below record Camera Catches Glimpses of Area Citizens at Annual Chamber Banquet DINNER CONVERSATION — City, Denanticlinte John A. Dugan (District 5) (eft), and Fred V. Haggard, president of the Oakland \ Willman (right) and District-2 City Commissioner Philip E. Rowston and cashier, at Community National Bank, and Raymond A. Tubbs, County CIO Council, See: GG | PO PPE: Whe RENEE. took & recess from city matters lastnight to attend the annuat wisn aptly a hand oc sngat apes Inc,, dinner at the wont Tetnple. III OFFICIALS ‘CONVERSE — Ponting Clty: SMaiadet Wolter K. i ona "eens eemrit A ne Sse ree es i er _ talked at the dinner. GET-TOGETHER — W., Arthur Taylor (left), vice president AT BANQUET — George M. for Pontiac ‘Motor Division, and partment, last night's ber meeting. EF Watson (left), personnel director James C.. Mount, standards de- MC Truck aiid {Coach Division, talk business before = aes Press Photos * a _ After Western Tour. WASHINGTON @ — President; “Freedom means we have to he is askingjhave our opinions respected, even Congress for an additional|though they are not always very 76 million emergency |good,": he added, drought relief. “jtal, ending a six-state aerial and ground inspection tour which fam comvidced that’ the state should as- in| (9) good prob- Powers and Petroff praised the lems of agriculture, including dis- work of and local suf H 3 rs gitté i z 2 - rn railroads have agreed : Bien ; “Money Request “Added to U.S. Budget President}: Eisenhower flew back to the rats ae ee De _THR PONTIAC PRESS ‘ ae 500 Hear Lecture. at Chamber Dinner - (Continued-From Page One) : in our society, the speaker said: ‘Freedom is the right to look around—and also to look up.” OPINIONS RESPECTED “One of the "greatest weak- - | nesses 0f- our timesis—the“ine- > | ability to distinguish from per- manent and lasting happiness |. ‘ahd just’ tan," McParland said: ae Relating» many conflicts in to- day's world, “which have taken’ Caemuiiy National “ Officers Re-elected tn hdnsacenetaline of tes "started Sunday, presi-| i tinua- veep Powers outlined his ‘‘reci-| _ Although he called i nua. ae nok calla manager. willing to make it,” " Hirlinger told Floyd B, Homer C. Jackson, Wil- H, Proven mon Dares P. Nig: and 1955 president Ralph mder of the 15-man of Directors will consist of . Henry E. Gotham, S. Lyndall, Edward A. Reginaid J, Nicholas, Curtis ry Patton, John A; Riley, George! E. Wyman and Dr Petroff. a's 4 All offieers and directors of the \Cémmunity National Bank were re-eleeted at the annual share- livestock feed assistance to drought-plagued farmers and ranchers. holders’ meeting yesterday, accord- aj to President Alfred C. Gir- " Total resources as. of Dec. 31, 1956, were $95,793,717.17,- accord- ppro-|ing to the bank's year-end state- expand industrial development in the Great Plains ‘states. ‘More than 40 per cent of Ameri- cans over 10 years old buy daily newspapers, which is more per capita than in any other country of the. world. Bareau Report eold » Low cloud, Today in Pontiac temperature preceding 8 a.m. : .: Wind velorcit sets sf at 5: : P = Macs Flees Wednesday” ot t ov eee eee ree 12-14) | i) ment of condition. Deposits to- taled $88,789,163.60, Directors hamed to new terms include: Irving B. Babcock,- Louis H. Cole, Robert R, Eldred,~ Harold A. Fitzgerald, Girard, Alfred. R. Glancy Jr., Harold E. Howlett, Howard W. Huttenlocher and Har- ibid M. Pryale. President Presents $71.8 Billion Budget (Continued From Page One) ernment costs are cut, the admin- istration can, ‘‘a year hence, give consideration” to tax relief along with a further reduction of the na- tional debt. REPEAT REQUESTS . Many of the President's budget, requests were repeats of his pro-| grams which Congress didn’t pass last year, program mittees, (3) adequate budget, (4) responsible board of directors, and “Our Chamber of Commerce will continue to be as strong a8 you are 4 THE NEW AND OLD — Dr. George N. Petroff (left), 1956 Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce president, last night turned over the president's gavel to newly-elected 1957 president Howard } O, Powers (right). The exchange was made at Elks Temple. - Pontiag Press Photo the Channber's ‘annual dinner meeting at the Some 500 persons attended the meeting to see the installation of new officers and directors and hear Dr. Kenneth McFarland, noted General Motors Corp, lecturer. (Continued From Page One) 14 Mile road, Nearly two-thirds of the county lives south of this point, although the present ulation jrend is to North Oak- land County, merce called the Royal Oak move, “a complete earyriee, ” tion of the proposed new court- NEEDS CAREFUL STUDY | “But if they are seriously ini- tiating a drive to. shift the coun- ty seat, we would certainly have .|to consider it very carefully,” Hir- linger said. : Of a possible ' change. in the lo-| cation of the county seat, Hir- linger .commented: , ~“T suppose “there isn't a com- munity tr the county that in just getting a new courthouse than in getting a new court house in their area.” The county seat question will be considered in addition to a 10- part agenda prepared for the sup- ervisors. Among important questions will be whether the proposed $37 mil- lion extension of Northwestern Highway will cost more money than originally planned. . x * * There will be a report from roads committee chairman Don A. last month that. bonds for the con- struction went begging at their original 3.5: per cent interest rate. A State Highway Department official warned. then that the bend rate fight have to be in- creased to 4 per cent to interest bonding companies. The interest rate would be on county bonds to pay its share of the total cost. — $90,000 a year for 20 years. he state and federal governments would pay the rest. An unscheduled report on stop-, gap recommendations to relieve | home also is expected. Supervisors to Hear | m= Royal Oak Petition McDonald of Sylvan Lake, which will deal with an announcement) for Foreign F CAIRO w—President Nasser’s, government hag ordered all for-/ ‘eign banks, insurance companies! land ownership. | British and French concerns| , were ‘‘Egyptianized” as of today,/ish-French attack. Estimates of. also five years to convert themselves to Egyptian joint stock compan-) ies. The series of “Egyptianization| decrees’ stopped just short of the! government's taking over owner- ship. But it insured government control of foreign-owned concerns through a new octopus-like. ‘‘eco- nomic organization” which. will be, given shares in. the firms. x *k * Nasser Order | Egyptian joint. stock companie . All shares of the banks and in-| Strangers drifted into town one by Spells Doom irms in Egypt {dollars or more? _|to Hale's pephew, ‘Emest Burk- |hart. Then if Mollie should die, _.|there would be_no trouble handling) | Ernest. Then the “King of ‘the Osage! Hills’ got the most brilliant idea of ‘his life. Old Lizzie Q. was a. full-bigoded Osage worth maybe $330,000, That old squaw had three “head rights" herself; and/ her daughters held one and one-sixth “head rights” each, . OK 1 10. Ae: Site Purchane J tor School on Inkster Rd: * BIRMINGHAM — Another one cothes into view Bigs yb pe yyy oor t night ‘sheen the purchase ye a 10-acre ‘site on Inkster — for a new elementary school. Final purchase agreement! ; wil] be made, subject to the rig proval of the school attorney and architect. * senting the owner of property . Woodward and Redding road hag asked commissioners vt consider dwellings of the ee i asked that the matter be re Board of Education spokesmen said that, with the rapid ave ene bese gute tt siaka Wile.” Ane answer was. simple. He was a weak-willed daughters, Anna Brown and Other Board of Education activi-|. the plan me od uith, die along |ties included granting . permission board as quickly for Christ Chutch Cranbrook of| Possins, S thelr decision may be Sines Hills the temporary use * BE SERRE SES. ONS AT a PyOOEE PEt ose congratulated the Department ‘of ‘Public Works om the excellen A paved Cine foie the ‘nob won and an excellent “job v was s done in The question ef open parking| hauling away obstructing snow -stations—in—the—eity of Birming-| piles,” he said. ham was discussed at Monday) William F. Mulcahy of Birming- -| picturesque | ¢hucklehead anyway. x *& *¥. . Hunters found Anna Brown's had been shot in the head. Her estate was worth $100,000. Old Lizzie Q. died two months later, apparently of hatural causes; her estate was. divided between Rita Smith and Mollie Burkhart. And just as the verse said, now | there were only two little Indians. FIND COUSIN’S BODY Anna Brown had a cousin—a Indian named Henry Roan Horse who liked to wear his hair down his back in plaits. Roan Horse's body was found) outside Fairfax, slumped in the) front seat of his car. Henry's brains had been blown out for reasons known best to Hale. Two. months later, while Hale was at the Texas Fat Cattle Show, the United States and the Nasser ‘regime. A large share of the foreign en-| John W, Hirlinger, manager of,and trading firms in Egypt con-|terprises in Cairo were run by the Pontiac Area Chamber of Com.) lverted to Egyptian management British and French citizens. These, firms were séqiiestered by the|. Egyptians after the Oct, 31 Brit-! alue of the British-| it is to get action on construc- Other foreign firms were given French businesses range from 210) 'the Indians appealed to’ Washing- million to 980 million dollars, x * * Alter Nasser nationalizéd the Suez Canal last June, Britain! \froze more than 280 million dol- lars in Egyptian assets in London. The decrees declare that all! co-| agents for foreign firms in Egypt must be Egyptian-born citizens i I foreign concerns, including some) the end of a middle class Euro-| pean community that jas pros- _|pered in Egypt for a century as importers of Western-produced consumer goods and bankers and eo for Egyptian economic’ life... % < . xk & The net effect probably will be to kill the possibility of any con- siderable U.S. :or Western. invest- ment in Egypt so long -as_ the present regime remains in power. The new laws also threaténed, prospects of cooperation between anna Pontiac State Picks Officers and Directors The Pontiac State Bank reelected | directors and officers for new terms last night when sharehold- jers gathered at the bank’ s annual meeting. President_Mito J. Cross reported total resources of $26,356,143.61 as of Dec. 31. 1956. Tota] deposits amounted to $24,772,739.83. Directors reelected at the meet- ing include: John C. Cowe, Cross, Rodger J. Emmert, H. Russel Holland, Frank ‘and Stuart E, Whitfield. ; d f' rae eeeees anit dine esncelentirely by Egyptians. All board| owned by Americans. They spell| 3 Judges fo Hear members and those responsible | for bank administration must be! native-born Egyptians. There is one American bank in Egypt, a branch of the First Na- tional City Bank of New York. Mayor Voisine Case DETROIT (INS) — Three fed- eral judges were named today to sit in the injunction proceedings through which Ecorse Mayor Wil- liam W. Voisine seeks to halt the | state's ouster action directed against him and_three members ; surance companies must be owned One, a cattle buyer, an insurance ‘| their next moves. | hills to exchange Fairfax was shaken by the’ ex- plosion which killed Bill and Rita | Smith and their maid. After this, there remained only one little Indian — Mellie Burkhart. ~ shook the Osage Tribal Council to action. In desperation, | ton. The appeal was. relayed to the, FBI and the order went out) launching ‘an investigation that was to last for three years and become ore of the’ classic man- hunts in FBI history. ‘STRANGERS’ ARRIVE No, one in Fairfax paid any particular . attention when. four salesman, an oil prospector and -an Indian herb doctor. They went about their business, minding their own affairs. Weeks passed without a break in the case. But then a signal was passed and the four strangers met one night in the badlands to decomposed body in a ravine, She! |at the present time. full-blooded Osage! night's commissian meeting. It revealed that twenty stations now meet parking lot ordinance re- quirements and are being licensed There are thirty-six open sta- tions which can not be licensed at present. Ten of the lot owners are negotiating contracts for the improvement of their lots. Com- missioners voted to allow an lextension until August 31 when another study of the lot situation will be made. x * * A public hearing on the city- , ties pool their information and plan The “cattle buyer” was the oldest, and he was the FBI agent in charge for this special under- cover detail. The four stangers often met under the Stars in the Osage information and each time they met they had a bit more information. Gradually the picture was taking of his city council. Judgé Charles C. Simons of the | ‘cinnati,. designated himself, ‘Chief District Judge Arthur F. Lederle land Judge Theodore Lev in to hear ithe injunction case. Voisine’s attorneys contend he cannot properly defend himself against removal while a criminal case against him is still pend- ing. Voisine and 18 others indicted by Circuit Judge Theodore R. Bohn's one-man gambling - graft grand jury were afraigned before Cir- cuit Judge Frank-Fitzgerald yes- | ‘terday in the criminal case. congestion at the county children’s|A. Mercer, Goodloe H. Rodgers | They stood mute and pleas of) ‘notéguilty were entered. $3,228,000 in New Projects Slated for 1957 ¥Y — Partly, expenditure of $3,228,000 in new projects, is slated for possible City *\Commission acceptance tonight. | + | “TI will recommend the accen- tance of the revised program as it is within the limits of the budget ‘projects to.undertake in 1957, TOTAL TOPS $9 MILLION Including the projects begun! during the past var this year’s! project am@unts to $9,763,000 in civic improvements—the largest in| ‘the city’s history, Willman said. | Out of the budget, which must a City to Act on Improvement Fund The 1957 capital improvement Wrenn on what street improvement|to the city” for utilities, if the land: , {program for Pontiac calling for an is annexed,”’ Willman explained. x kw * . Another item on the 25-point late will be a report from the city attorney regarding condemnation: of property needed for the extep: sion of East Huron. This is a step in a ‘project to link Huron with o Motor: Alton street tei Franklin t Mic’ tor street from Maines to nu; rom Earlmodor to iver Ba from_t Herndon's Pon: tiac Aphrtaent erly Hine of First’ street from Joslyn Grandie avenue from ‘ball; Hazel avenue fro to \Starr; and Herndon avenue from Clin- tor. River drive to Orchard Lake -ave- nue, | form, And the man | picture was William K. .Hale, Detroit Orders 500 More DETROIT — An estimated 100,000 more Detroit voters will be “mechanized” in the Feb. 18 primary. The City has added 500 voting machines. They will serve about 170 districts, bringing the total of mechanized precincts to 1,016 of the city's 1,491. The Circuit Court of Appeals in Cin-; in the vacation of an easement between, ‘Cole street and Lincoln avenue |has been set for Feb. ll. The) request has. been made by the R, E. Dailey Co.; which wishes to expand the building now oc-| cupied by the Birmingham Plas- Co, x * * ‘A spokesman of Birmingham | High School student body appeared | before City Commissioners Mon- Finally the agent in charge told’ jhis men: ("Hale is our man without a doubt. He had $25,000, insurance policy on Henry Roan Horse's life. And it looks as if he was work- ing to get the estates of Lizzie Q. and her daughters centered in the hands of that nephew of his.” The wall against which they had pounded so long crumbled slowly but steadily. From the) ds came a tip that a “convict in the state penitentiary knew, something @bout the murders. The convict, who hated Hale, said, “Go see Ernest Burkhart. He will tell you everything you ham has-been named to the Board of Directors of the Michigan Chap- ter of the American Society of Cemetery Engineering. Rd., member of the architectural firm of Shreve, Walker and Asso- ciates of Detroit, has been named to prepare prelimmary drawings for the new Birmingham Unitarian Church at Lone Pine road and Woodward avenue in Bloomfield Hills. Both Spalding and his wife are active members in the ~ church which currently serve Bloomfield ‘Hills, Birmingham and a number ‘of Pontiac residents. The church now meets a“, Royal Oak and plans are being pushed as rapidly as possible to start construction of the new building, Van Wagoner to Tell of Mackinac Bridge Murray D. Van Wagoner, former governor of Michigan, will speak to an expected 200 members of the Oakland County Employes Credit Unign at thetr annua] ban- quet at 6:30 p. m. tonight in the Civic Room of.the Federal Sav- ings and Loan ‘Assn., 761 W. Huron St. Oakland County Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams will introduce Van Wagoner, who will discuss the Mackinac Bridge.. Van Wag- oher is a member of the Mackinac Bridge Authority, “7 Van Wagoner is’ a former state highway commissioner and was civil governor of Bavaria fol- lowing World War. Ul. want to knew." was the weak and told the Hale's nephew link. He broke agents how Hale had dominated. him all his life. He named the, killers of Henry Roan Horse and the Smiths; and he said his uncle, had plotted the murders. One by one the killers con-! fessed. In each case they pointed) the finger at Hale. Hale. was convicted and sentenced to’ life imprisonment. If was Jan, 26, 1929. (Hale was paroled in 1947.) The bloody reign of the ‘King of the Osage Hills’’ had ended The FBI had closed one of the’ most fantastic cases in its files. (Copyright by Don Whitehead) (Temerrew: Rebellion Against Crime.) ; City now owris 3,060 machines. Among the guests will be mem- bers of the county road commis- sion and board of auditors, ac- cording to Mary Shanks, chairman of the banquet committee. An election of union: officers, directors and committee members |is scheduled during the business meeting. AWOL 3 Months, 2 Men in County Jail Two men reported to be Air — Force deserters from Scott Field, TH., were in the Oakland County jail today awaiting action by |military authorities following over three months away from the base. Victor H, Hall, 33, of Alma, and Charlie Washam Jr., 26, of Spring- | field, Mo., were arrested last night in Walled Lake by FBI agents. Police said the men, who had served eight years together in the Air Force, had. apparently been jliving in Walled Lake since they went AWOL ‘last Oct. 3. Both are married and have been working for -a Plymouth firm, since depart- ing the camp, ‘/and tax rate,” Pontiac City Man- be approved by Jan. 31, $875,000-as Paddock at Michigan. A resolution of public: necessity i Si 41 ager Walter K. Willman said yes- terday. Willman added that would stress to commi: that they have through Jan. 22 to | pon Spl adjustments they year. A public hearing will be jaa that night at the City Hall. x * * ' The acteptance of the capital im: . 3 ‘44|Provement program would give the "*W Church om che site, igreen light to City Prraineer: Lewis. tax money plus spectal assessment and state gas and weight tax. 'veceipts, would go toward making up the $3,228,000 program. Also holding a place on to- night's weekly commission agenda is a report from Willman on a request from the Emmanuel. Baptist Church, for the city to annex a 32-acre pilot in Bloom- field Township. The church plans to construct a $12 ralitton project including schools a The Teport will “ve. the. costs 7 % 4 \Paving prejects in Pontiac: for a water main in Mt. Clemens A d re from the al- ween port ' street from Emerson ‘to Bay, and torney| will outline the amend- ment to the personnel rules al- lowing for the partial P payment of ‘south to existing main, will be pre- accrued sick time for city em- sonted tonight for consideration. ployes. Commissioners will ‘study a pro- posed city formula for assessments of irregular shaped lots. x k *& Public improvements hold a big share of the agenda with 11 public hearings and four confirmations of peviocts sched. Mrs. Carl F. Rose, 368 East HEARINGS SLATED ‘Boulevard, has submitted a- let- Hearings will be held on the fol- ter thanking the commission «for lowing proposed two-inch blacktop! its. action taken recently xgestor- in Bay ‘street from (Mt. ‘Clemens, day, defeati ling parking to- Bast boulgvard, ze ag en debate over eer ‘cent farm n pa are WATERFORD TOWNSHIP -WINNERS — The | Debating team of - Waterford Towpship High School took the Inter-Lakes Championship ‘Mon- Farmington High's téam in a! * | ports. Members - $up- ‘tian nd eer Pontiae: Press Phote of the team that rolled up a 61 record this year are (Lr): ‘Dustan: Smith, Dom, Tate, Barbara Hutchings, ard Frank Manning, © Others on the team not shown are Jane +: Dowie: Rebata. | David Spalding of 812 Ridgedale - Upton School in . 4 e “THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1957 Pera to get ready, mark down goods and train sales people for the | —— Biggest Bargain:Event in our 23 ae years in Pontiac. , ATCH THURSDAY'S: » } HELP WANTE e 15 Saleslodies @5 Salesmen fs Peak Season Brings High Rates Te 5 Coshiers me “ : e 10 Wrappers. GEORGE'S - NEWPORT'S Dispute Brings _ iThreat to Close — ‘My y Fair Lady’ NEW YORK » — An. arbitrator meets today with both sides in 4 ldispute that threatens to close the SEARS Suns N SAGINAW emMins 3 | COMPLETE a, SERVICE Daily 9:30 to 5:30—Fri. ‘til 9 : NU Visi ape Upiedl (o Co. 103 N.. SAGINAW ST. Broadway hit musical “My Fair Lady.” . : The dispute centers over the \Irish actor Edward Mulhare. Har- rison leaves for ‘a four-week va- cation Feb, 4. _*k ®© * Actors Equity Assn. is opposed to the plan. It contends there is no need to import a foreign actor for the temporary role when an American attor could handle the part just as well, The producers said they planned to close the show if Mulhare was prevented from taking the assign- ‘Ment, Kashmir Dispute Sizzles KARACHI & ~— Thousands of demonstrators paraded in Karachi today in support of Pakistan's dem- pared for’ U. N. Security, Council action on the Pakistani-Indian dis- pute over Kashmir. The mob burned effigies of Indian Prime Minister Nehru and* pro-Indian Premier Bakshi Ghulam Moham- ) mad. jot these church fires for us to! 6 Fes i ia "| 4 fi » fi ef a ney Florida. ‘Sunshine Costs ‘Dearly or eset te ‘Slaughter gold coast,. ind wll ini ts? without selling the family jewels, it can be done, if. you're patient, x ko * The same hotel th that. ‘is now asking - @ -minimuny of. $36 per a room offers a one-week, mid summer vacation for $138, : This includes air ‘transportation from cities as ‘far distant as New York. twin bedroom with bath, private terrace, entertainment and dancing and pool and privileges. neh igs greed | near-perfect swimming and, fishing weather in, recent weeks. ocean front’ motel will run $15 Se ew ey. : “Tf you're ‘bent on visiting the SYRACUSE, N. Y, (#—Fire last night wrecked the headquarters church of the Central New York Methodist Conference dnd a near- by publishing plant. buildings were damaged. The fire raged out of control in a down- town block for four hours, x * * Fire Chief Francis R, Ferren said, ‘‘There have been too many chalk them off as accidental.” He ordered an investigation. . x & * Fire officials said they thought the fire started in the boiler room, of the First Methodist Church which was gutted. One wall col- lapsed. Also wrecked was a building that housed the international headquarters and the publishing association of the Wesleyan Meth- N MATTER what make of car you're “going with” \_right-now—here’s one that will spark a new love light in your eyes. This Buick’s a fresh new beauty in looks, in lines, in sweeping contours. And a beauty in other ways as well. Even for a Buick, this one’s a joy and a treasure in the road-wise way it handles. In the way it levels with you on the turns. In the way it holds up its ‘head whenever you give it the brakes. when you head this honey out of town and put it through its paces on the expressways and byways. Thaf’s when you discover the exhilaration of power-pitch performance. When you fully appreciate the immediate response of the latest, greatest version of Variable Pitch Dynaflow—instant Dynaflow. But your longest whistle of sheer delight comes: Yet this performance is more than a matter of trans- mission advances. There's a whopping new 364-cubic-inch V8 engine to give it life. An engine completely brand new, all new. With 300 horsepower, 400 foot-pounds of torque, and a mileage-stretching 10 to 1 com- pression. There’s even more to keep you smiling—150 other brand-new features. Including fresh decorative touches, new colors and interior trim combinations—and, of course, the extra safety and security of Buick brawn and ruggedness arid solidity of So come in and go stepping with a new 1957 Buick. Today. *New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow ie the only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It ia standard on Roodmaster, Super end Century—optional at modest extra cost on the Special. on the road that Drive os if it were. i] earery Reminds In freezing weather, remember fhat anything like water con be ice. PASS IT ALONG construction. looks ~a simple device that’ you reach that pace, bd Drop below that pace ©! tod Orchard Lake Avenue any - MINDER + (aly Bikar saree pre -hour you want. You merely preset the wee Ong butzet sounds. etc a nd the buzzer stops. ~7 a — Fire Ruins Church in East A second church and two other the First Methodist Church, esti- odist Church of America, which is separate from the main Metho- dist denomination. B. Churchill Loveland, _presi- dent of the board of trustees of i oun : with Simple [~. Hand Tools {7 Adjustable—Fits Any Size Plate License. Bracket . = OF Value $1.19 Bracket No. JA-302 88c have to have license ront of your automobile as well as on rear. brackets make it easy for you to have front plate aes anes drilling, easy to install with $8 N. Saginaw —ind Floor _Ous REMINGTON. Com- NEVER NEEDS NEW BATTERY — This new flashlight charges itself b plugging it in_ any electric outlet, and. guaranteed by fam- plete with spare bulb and unbreakable lens. RP AS ee te | 7 95, SuNDaiEs —Main Fleer y just. Made mated loss of that structure at $700,000. It was built in 1904. Damage to other’ structures was xk & we not known. — The Wesleyan Methodist Church was damaged slightly by fire and)$ Also contained inthe . triangu- lar block were the two office, were damaged.|e ty Public Works Department of- fices, Three firmen were hurt, none} seriously, fighting the fires in? subzero temperatures, Rep. Mcintosh Named for Probe Committee geececoveccococccooess THURSDAY ONLY SALE MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS “DURENE’ Treated Cotton :Child’s Knee ~—_ Wide elastic ° top, knit to fit, e@ washiast colors g @and white — ® will not fade e or siain. Sizes : 642 to 92 for boys and girls. 8 N. —Main Floor e eeececeseeeeseeeeseeee approval today, recommended that Rep. McIntosh of Michigan be assigned to the Unamerican Activ- ities Committee instead of Veterans Affairs. ~ SV! Cd a pleasantly and effectively. Rivse Away, “ the fragrant after-shampoo rinse, con- trols even the most infectious cases of dandruff! Leaves hair soft and man- ageable; scalp healthy and scale-free. Easy and economical to use, Rinse Away requires no in-between applica- tions. 3-months’ supply —only $1.00. | No federal tax The action, subject to House | SHSSHSSSSSSSSSSSHSSHSSSHSSSSSSSSSOSOSLS || Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. Only Deluxe Model With 5 YEAR Guarantee HAMILTON BEACH FOOD MIXER Regular $60.95 —NOW AT SIMMS— 7® , Only $2 Holds Yours THE VERY FINEST — at less than the price of an ordinary mixer, Timer, automatic ‘shut- off , . stainless steel bowls power juicer attachment . . full power at all speeds. Bring SIMMS All Your for LOWEST § PRICES © fac || PRINTING DEVELOPING SUPER-SIZE BLACK and WHITE SNAPSHOTS Best possible prints ran- teed by ELECTRIC - EYE process. Only genuine EAST- _ papers and chemicals New “TECHNICOLOR” Processing * of All Your . COLOR™ SLIDES by MAIL man inveis "1 pished gave © your PROCESSING PRICES on KODACHROME Slides K-135 Film—20 exp...$1.:50° K-135 Film—36 exp.. .$2.50 Stereo .....5 $2.25 and 6. .50 K-828 bin’ :3 exp... Photo Needs 1.00 @ ‘em to SIMMS. JIMM.:: Deluxe Features; © DATED PRINTS 4 year) @ DECKLED EDGE @ FADEPROOF @ HI-LIGHTS @ CONTRAST SIMMS All Your es FILMS For Fest—Fine PROCESSING by EASTMAN © Movie © 35mm Slides © Color Prints You are certain of “BEST POS- @ SIBLE” pictures when your $. films are processed by the e COMPANY THAT MADE © THEM ... and you them get $ beck QUICKER when you bring « OTHERS OLIVER MOTOR SALES, INC. Pontiac, Michigan. Pr Phone FE 2-9101 100% edie. ess a voles Sizes ; 10-20 #E) Ladies’ Uniforms $5.00 Value—Now « White ‘nyion uni- ets. Pully o- Sanforized. BROADCLOTH LADIES’ UNIFORMS NYLON — No Ironing | 0 to a A Specials Sizes 6 fo 16 . —Bargai Basemeht $1.69 Value—First Quality for THURSDAY ONLY Another 1,000 on. Sale FIRST come — FIRST SERVED Boys’ 10-0z. Denim Dungarees 99° LIMIT — 4 Pr, to a customer — Long-wear blue denim... San- forized non-shrink . . . zipper fly .. wide belt loops... reinforced 3 at all points of strain. SUMMA 2:0 Saturday Special Adjustable ‘Goose-Neck’ Student Lamp Complete With BULB re 1.79 Value All metal, ee ee fin- ish. Flexible t rey any ye et ng to focus } Not exactly as shown. Novelties: —Main Floor HOSPITAL TESTED Wonder Working Formula Gives Amazing Relief From Paiiis of RHEUMATISM, ARTHRITIS Soc wn agtst OE EP ca oe i Se ef LE Rea : mat / Tose 1S Vary | 5 tes on. 1 Benefits of ry Lottery = sales it = a al as in example ot the confuse. @ fi s 2 — caodee of : after: | and indecision which surround = "a a meanths, each bond holder is eligi- | the whole facade of gambling in ee ble to share in a monthly draw- | the U. S. Though the numbers al ing from a pool made up of the | racket is thug-controlied and in (es. 4 per cent interest rates paid by | some cities operates blatantly, ) the government. It is mathema- an et ee =" leally possible, though bieakly | small- sellers sen- clean-ups, after which things may = fe 7 . : : | FLOOR SHOP Ase a Several years. ago Judge Fredithe legalized lottery q ues tio njdon’ : | =: BS oS = 6 o_o Wham, Southern District of Minois,|"PUsht comments like thesejwe hi ied see). Harrisburg (Pa.) photographer:| Denver ; oe i ae re 8 @ 8 «” a | re Sen a “1 eat heart dense research a aN ee a , mae ian ee ‘a iu it i a 5 a = & Camarrata . Decision, ..which.. he ful for the Post Office in Accurate Postal Scales. to 12 oz. First Class Air Mell aad which judge Wham opened, “Even in the cases where the | bets are placed upon the winner of { thee fe si fie tht I elm ito transport and deliver mail re-| ia * King Size 6 qt. * Fire King Ovenware Glass Cover E ~2nd and 3rd class mail, ,.$2.95 |_7adse Whsm's ruling te cited i : store, The lucky 83 customers entries will be drawn: from the box by Clifford Smart, Superintendent of Walled Lake Id: * ry to Be Given wat Absolutely FREE! %& EQUIPPED with WESTINGHOUSE THERMOSTAT int | Nothing to guess—nothing te buy. Just fill in your name and address on the entry blenk which you will get at the o. 5-lb. Parcel Post Scale $7.95 Accounts Short . eer eenveeee $27.95 of Fees Collected PT i'l AN A TE a a 4 tr : pencil purse set in 1 Salle sdiee.. rap account of Justice ages e Just. . >see ee *°0 |Jim McClellan of Utica. “Cheese the right point . 4 4 for he way you wotons Eddie Cantor Home somber! 30 ee! | After Hospital Stay 1 I i _ jit fine where he -is.: The goods’ he, jmakes still sell real fine here. xk Kk * -Nobody bother to put the bite on him where he lives, and if they did so he could square himself with a double sawbuck and a jug of red. His favorite politician is Pierre Poujade. 3 When he writes, my friend is filed with news about what a wonderful life is the taxless life. Everybody seems.to agree, Even the U.S. Burean of Internal Revenue. It recently sent him a $10,000 refund for an overpay- ‘ment he made a few years back, having put him to the trouble. My friend is relieved of an emo- tion peculiar to many Americans at this time of year. It is the a ”* al lcomparing what he coughed up| "rd and let's hope it apologized for | Re ae ae Fe an pay. (oat ani, Brother) is ons tex pass a ee ‘feeling that comes from, taking foreign ald program, and | te comprehend that in this coming year we'll spend 5,000 times as muchas we invested in fhe Louisiana Purchase (827,192 square miles which made 14 states), and 10,000 times what Alaska (586,400 square miles) | a ‘know: a “salaried bloke who begged, borrowed and filched $60,- 000 not long ago to wipe out .a lien and draw more or less abreast in the taut race for financial survival. $i3 BILLION BUDGET He had just enough left over from several years of work to buy himself a drink, which he did, and was sitting there feeling Jidrained_but_noble when. the radio. announced that the federal. budget for the ee: Secel er will be k * . Se To spend what the U.S, will spend this year on everything ‘from atom bombs -to zithers an individual born at the time Christ was bern, and given enduring life, would have had to blow $100,000 a: day,-every day, seven days a week. Mike Todd (and what a delight- about him) couldn’t de that even if the money wasn’t his’n. . ‘A Navy plane accidentally dropped a couple of wing tanks on a New York suburb the other day. They cost more than a lot of hardpressed folks could raise in taxes last year. *« * * A single battleship broadside for; the newsreels was once estimated ‘to cost about $50,000. Those H- bomb tests at Eniwetok-Bikini last May might have cest $5,000,000,000. |. It is impossible to relate one’s Ohio. Send your idea to Junior Editors, care of this newspaper. Vie — was unable to testify at Brewer's | yesterday LAST 3 DAY ~ THURS. - FRI-SAT. 10% OFF ON ALL _ Pratt & Lambert PAINTS PRATT & LAMBERT NEW LYT-ALL FLOWING FLAT © The Better Alkyd Flat Enamel “e Exclusive Colors .. @ Rolls or Brushes on Easily ® No Objectionable Odor ® Scrubbable PRATT & LAMBERT VITRALITE ENAMEL ~® Beautiful Colors © Eggshell or Gloss © Easy fo use © Ne Objectionable Oder ® Serubbable | i} ‘ For pooDweRe& aad TRimM PRATT & LAMBERT "61" FLOOR VARNISH @ For rich looking floors ® Clear Gloss, Satinor Dull * Roll it on — Standing yp © Never needs waxing © Easy to clean — Lasts for years and PAINT CO. that defy | WEAR & WEATHER Maximum protection for porches, floors and stairs of wood, concrete or metal — inside of out — calls for Pratt & Lambert "61" Floor & Porch Enamel. Can be tolled on — up! Dries to a lustrous, mar- resistant surface that's easy ‘to keep clean. empty feeling (Editor's note: You TH E GOOD HOUSEKEEPING cost. _My friend couldn't help. much, I guess, but he’s sure delighted Airport ¢ Quéstion in Air = GRAND RAPIDS — The Kent 4 ' County Airport Board of Control awarded. a $4,100 contract| } le Fisher and associates of] | South ‘Bend, tod. for a survey to determine~whether the airport ‘should continue at its present loea- tion or find another site. The firm ou made a_ recent ta cale | needs at Muskegon. — Pee Cemac Laboratories, Inc. - $5050 Greenfield, Deiroit 27, Mich, Low pressure tires for “autmo-| biles came in use in 1922, te ne nner teeter pe eee necinir a mn eta corm ote eter gan mom saciid Bazley’s Thursday Jey... White... dent” Eisenhower, age of about 10 years. toms afterward. caped. to be included out of our rat race. Ike's ‘Group’ Lives 10 Years, Says Dr. White NEW YORK i— Dr. Paul Dud- cardiologist 40. Preads, said” today “the {President is in a group of heart: attack. survivors who live an aver- , _ White told a news conference, fhe, ‘President was ‘in’ the most favo se able group of those surviving heart ‘attacks in that he had no aymp White talked with newsmen prior! ‘ to adressing a conference of the New York Heart Assn., ful series Bill Slocum is writing |}, more than 900 doctor, public health ‘leaders and social workers, Claim Two Arabs Killed TEL AVIV W—An Israeli army) spokesman said two Aree infiltra-| southern Negeb Desert, The! : spokesman said they were part of. | a band, presumably from Jordan,’ which did not. halt when chal-; lenged near Nurim and Povim set-) tlement. The rest of the band es- nn American men smoke an aver- | age a about 100 Cigars per year. Super Specials! * 78 N, SAGINAW. | Kosher Style | Corned Beef..... i ae si tiie Sie‘ mets ah ks LO ee This Valuable Coupon Entitles — With Meat Purchase the Bearer to a 1~Ib. Limit Fresh “BUTTER rads = CAR P rT EF iia| eoieos THE FLOOR SHOP ”™'2'.,5:¢""" col = Only attended gs of PONTIAC SHOP “TERRIFIC ONE DAY PRICES REDUCED UP TO ‘150.00! “AUTOMATIC WASHERS... DRYERS... REFRIGERATORS. TELEVISION...GAS & ELECTRIC RANGES... OIL HEATERS Hurry in Thursday for these terrific values in Famous Brand Washers... Dryers... Refrigerators, etc. Included are many brand new models — floor samples — demon- strators — etc. Our LOW SALE PRICE includes FREE DELIVERY — FREE INSTALLATION — FREE SERVICE: — No hidden extras to pay. ¢ ‘THURSDAY | ONLY! | All. Famous Brands Fully Guaranteed Automatic oa Refrigerators Automatic Dryers maaan, sjog | “Werner” $178 | einem 88 Mate... STGB | 10% Gihe'tew....... VBE | wastron” 5.9 Ne SSB] MUCMAMEA DE «$348 | wumron = sg. meet 5S | A 5188 | auton $128 Television |: Electric Ranges Gas Ranges EMERSON $269.95 RCA Console Very Specicl, 21". MOTOROLA 24-in. Consolette .. Swivel Console, 21”. $198 $198 _ $238 i RCA ESTATE, Griddle, 40-in. 2 Ovens, 5 Burners, 449.95. KELVINATOR, 30-in. Timer, Big Oven, $249.95. GENERAL ELECTRIC 36-in., Fully Auto., 269.95. Auto- DIXIE, 36-in., 5 Burner, Center Griddle, 199.95 HARDWICK, 30-in., Full Width Oven, $179.95. ROPER, 36-in., Divided Top, 199. 95 $298 3188 4188 $98 $118 $138 een weet Oil Heaters 5 Reom DUO-THERM, $124. ee ee 95 ++ $88. $98 | Cleaners Small Appliances GENERAL ELECTRIC $69.95 with Attach... HOOVER Upright with , Attach, $141.95 .».. $1075 $1388 $1388 rf ° GE Steam tron ....,... $3995 $3995 Toastmaster Toaster ... Mixmaster ote ee ee ee oe rt =e _on HI-FI and Record Players Lana 00 . _ Open ane? and F riday til 9 PM. FE 44-1555 are | yh aa Bet sag ‘ a r pes. % | Dir rectors, | Of natin % — ficers i in. Sgt Bank I eeti a Asking for Bids. ito Raze Homes Manager R. A. Slone to Seek Clearance of 4 at Rochester ROCHESTER — At the regular 7 meeting of Village -Council here this week, Village Manager Robert A, Slone was instructed to ask for bids for the removal of the razing of the other three houses on] — and Main street alley. Feb. 6 is sent site of the new off-| § ie Vee Helens % | = in Waterford | | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The -|Fashion Your Figure club meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Wa- | F tashion Figure - Club to Meet: terford Township high school. Mrs, J. E. McCleod, origina. tor of the Pontiac Fashionettes and the’ local reducing club, will _give @ pep talk on diet and exer- cise. exercise. Keexpase ieaoiiine Deposits will All over-weight women in Water- ford Township are urged to join _4the Fashion Your Figure club for an evening of “fun -and~ healthy ears gaps all ae : All Financial Institutions Reporting Excellent Year By JOE HAAS | ~The annual stockholder meetings of most of the banks in the Pon- tiac area were’ held ‘Fuesday,;-and| directors were chosen.In | most cases these were followed by meet- ings of the directors, and the selec- tion of officers, Without exception, these financial report a good year. ‘every case there was-an; E. R. Hyne; vice president, Emil Keehn; executive vice president, R. O. Newcombe; cashier, W. R. ‘Kimble; directors, Hyne, New- combe, Kimble, Charles ~“Vane~-~-~- Winkle, E. R. Keehn, F. J. Hyne and A.’C. Park. ; Cass City Cass City State Bank: President; M. B. Auten; vice president, F. B. Auten; Vice*president:-aed.cashier, Tie Pe oe er . |the date for opening the bids. : - Manager Sione was also author- increase in resources and deposits, as well as in surplus and undivided - |profits. The customary dividends 2 uid 4 beh a C. M. Wallace; directors, MB. Auten, F. B, Auten, John Sandman, Clarkston Couple Marry in Methodist Ceremony Following a discussion on hav- ing a traffic officer placed at Fourth and Main street during school hours, Council: voted to_ senda fetter to the Rochester Community Schoo! Board ‘and ask their participation in the matter, Also approved was the request for holding the Blue Crutch .Tag Day on Jan. 18-19 for the Mareh of Dimes Campaign. General government and water|: and sewer bills amounting to $11,- 214.79 were ordered paid. Included in the amount was $8,000 for water and sewer revenue bonds and $300 interest. |Plan Methodist Board MoCARTHYS ARE PARENTS — Sen. Sesagli: R. MeCarthy. and his wife, Jean,-beam: proudly at their newly adopted daughter, five-week-old Tierney Elizabeth. The Wisconsin- Republican revealed the adoption while being interviewed on-a telecast in Washington. ‘The-30-pound ‘one-oiince baby was adopted from the New ‘York Foundling Home. | C. R. Hunt, C. M. Wallace and B. FE. Benkelman. New Pinney State> Bank: -Presi- dent, F. H. Pinney; vice presi- dent, Dorus Benkleman; cashier, R. H. Keating; directors, Pinney, Benkeiman, Keating, Mrs, Edward Pena, H. M. Bulen and W. J. Profit. were:.declared,. places -were:in excess. - Increases in capital stock were madp by some banks, largely to provide funds for further develop- ment in their. greas, The last - quarterly statement, as called for which...in. a few of -last-year- : Everitt Relief Corps, No. 227, Aux-| bazaars, rummage sales, etc. iliary to the Grand Army of the; Mrs, Republic one of the philanthropic;Corps is the only patriotic organ- work.” Auxiliary Gives Aid fo Area's Needy ROCHESTER — The William P.| projects is raised by selling tags, ization that a woman may join without affiliations,-and we wel- Zoliner announces, ‘“‘The;come members for this worthy organizations of this area shows aid to veterans, hospitalized pa- tients, needy children, Scouts and| schools is shown in its reports of; on Dec. 31, generally reflects not only the stable condition of the bank, but also that of the com- Sealy pie 1 ore, C. A. Laesch, H. M. Myers, L. T. .The year brought extensive/Bishop, R. L. Evarts, George changes in the physical setup of) Mathews, W. A. Myers and E. T. some of: the banks, the added in-|White,, Officers will be elected | vestment in new additions and later. equipment representing several! Lapeer Savings Bank: Dirctors, hundred thousand dollars. Results G, Caley, W. D, VanDusen, H. of the elections follow: . Baird, Don Gage, H. B. Zem- i R. L. Taylor and R. L. Clarkston Parsch. fficers will be chosen Clarkston State Bank: Chairman, later. Thomas J. Foley; president, Guy| ; Laper First National Bank: Directors, # Reyal Oak Meeting of 4 Towns 1956. Summary was — 7. its | Luncheon to Benefit vice president, John L. Estes; di- A. Walter; executive vice presi-|’ dent and-cashier, Robert L. Jones; ir E. Brownell, G. A. Dondero, Wayne Oakland Bank: Directors, ciating. Mr. Diugopolsky is at ‘the! Flumerfelt Funeral Home. brother also survive. ‘Hal Harrison Film Jan. 17 at Rochester ROCHEST E R—“Beyond the Shining Mountains,”’ second in The Wildlife Series under the Roch- ester Community Schools Adult Education Program, will be held Thursday evening in the Rochester Junior High School gym at 7:30. x * * Hal Harrison will show films highlighting twe exciting expedi- tion planned and executed for the story vf the Famous Lewis and Clark Trail. The camera travels up the Missouri River, over the — Carolyn Sue Ke!Milam and James Ogden both of president, Mrs, Conrad Zol ton was united in magriage Satur- Lie 9 were ushers. FOUR TOWNS +The Official She “tate Ch day with Ronald Byron Clements A reception following the -cere-|Board of Four Towns Church will] Joh roan, at the First Methodist Church here.|mony was held in the church par-|convene at the home of Mr. and page Veterans and there in C O ors 1 un The Rev. William Richards _per-lors. r @ honeymoon in north-/Mrs. Raymond Swackhammer,| 4, te obtain cloths mg, fer. eee eT nt ene, (oe comets ik nega) RIS Commo, o & P. m. Thurs- niture and ott ticles guests. y eee their home at 5265 Tubbs Rd. | day . . The bride, daughter of Mr. and : Child Welfare Chairman, Mrs.) Another big ‘‘scholarship-fund ; Arthur Tripp, gave statistics on the project is being planned by the Mrs. Glenn Kerton of 99 S. Main St., was dressed in a waltz length children. Mrs, | gown of taffeta, featuring a lace = hospital chairman, bodice and long pointed sleeves. She wore a heart-shaped nylon Hospital, the Oakland County In-|liam Lake road. headplepe . trimmed with seed firmary, the TB Hospital and| There will be a luncheon at 12 pearis held by a French illusion Wayne County General Hospital./o'clock, followed by various card vel, The group provided scuffies, lap games, and each table will have, Ostrander of Round Lake _|pobes, cards, socks, books puzzles individual prizes. Many door maid of honor with and shaving kits at each hospital. |prizes will be given during the carol Ann Collins of Clarkston and trioti of the affair, Mrs. George Dean. of Lake Orion as choy ccm hae vaescnted. a | She will be assisted by Mrs. Mark! American flags to Girl and Boy |afternoon, according to chairman bridegroom, son of Mr. and) Scouts, Brownies and one to the |5*¢Wart and committee members. Clements of 4840) New High ‘Schoo!, | ane Waterford Township Dr., had as his best. man|_ M raised for the ear's| branch of the Farm and Garden of Ecorse, Gerald ey , y association are Oliver . Avery, a Waterford Township High School student, to attend chet Michigan State University for a Ellen Seeoge ‘Romeo Getting |S: sr "rer sn P , so re year, and the grou out the years, towards the schol- Weds Tulsa Man Its First Motel: out the year HIGHLAND — Announcement is The public’ is soreied, and any: made of the marriage of Ellen Building Once Housed °"° ing to make reservations MR. AND MBS, ‘|Terry-Fortin Rite Read W. TERRY JR. ‘ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The ' recent wed of Carole Jeanne| CLIFFORD—Mrs, Elizabeth At-irortin and William Merle Terry| ‘kinson of : Clifford, _ who~ rece 3s. took place at 10. in St. Ben sary, spent the afternoon with) guests and greetings from a dozen x Ko _ * The Rev. Fr. Richard Thgmas: Clifford Woman 90 cities, In St. Benedict Church ‘building on the corner of West have been asked -to call Mrs. A. Emery, OR 3-1936. Assisting Mrs, Dean and Mrs.) Stewart are Mrs. D. F. Hoyt, Mrs. | Robert Materna, Mrs. E. T. Cle- land, Mrs. A. L. Adams and Mrs.) E. J. Lally, Jr. xk * * Luscomb Motor Sales; to Have 11 Units ROMEO — The 103 by 46 - foot Rocky Mountains and down the Columbia River to the Pacific.” WSCS of Troy to Hear Speech Gate and Prospect streets, which formerly housed Luscomb Motor Sales, ig being converted into the town's first motel. Remodeling of ‘the structure is. well under way, according to co-| owners James Schocke and Vojtech Karol Dlugopolsky OXFORD — Service for Vojtech Karol Dlugopolsky, 63, who died) yesterday, will be held on Friday} |from St. Joseph Church at 10 a. m. Burial will be at the Dominican | perforrfied the ceremony before 250, guests. Attending the bride as maid of honor was Ruth Goodwin with bridesmaids Shirley Fisher and Laura Terry sister of the bride- groom, The best man was Vern Car- Sisters Cemetery, Oxford, with the Rev. Fr. Thomas Zuiraitis offi- Howard Luscomb. Seven of the total 11 units will be completed! iin two weeks, Luscomb said, with| final completion date set for the middle of February. The building was a on sta- tion and garage before its pur- chase by Luscomb and Schocke. St. John at Dryden ‘Narties New Officers | DRYDEN—Newly elected offi- cers for St. John Episcopal Church ey said tee eS jinclude George Faulds, Ross that th acy ‘ lose the |Reynolds Jr., Grant Wells, Wray at they plan to ene ; | Groves, Ray Warner, Leon Hall, space under the canopy ' ‘Gerald Dockham and Donald front, |Bethune, as members of the | on U.N. Facts TROY — The WSCS of Troy Methodist Church is meeting at the Church Thursday at 7:30 p.m. speaker. She will give first hand jinformation on the many meetings of the United Nations which she has ‘attended. She will leave the meeting Thursday evening for Willow Run from where she will take a night flight to New York. There she will give more of her time to attending these meetings. Members of Naomi and Marium Circles will be hostesses. Refresh- ments will be served. The public is inyjted to attend. George Lindsey, ‘Waterford Township branch of the} Surviving -are his wife Maria,|man, H. H. Miller; president, W. E./ reported that}|Women's National Farm and Gar-| three children, Irenka of Czecho-| Lentz; vice president and cashier, her committee niade four hospital/den Association beginning at noon! slovakia, Vojtech of Oxford and M. H. Bennett; visits, These were to the Marine Friday at the CAI building on Wil-' Josef of Cleveland. A sister and Lentz, Miller, W. M. Shuttleworth, | ‘tors, Stocker,” Rossrhan, Donner, | iG. B. Tunstead; vice president and Mrs. Philip Gentile will be guest. A. F. Klein, C. A, Laesch, C. F. rectors, Foley, Walter, Jones, Es-\i ney ¢ Hf. S. Mott, A. L. Law. ‘es. Roy A. Alger and C. W. Rob-/., “i inn S. Miller, Flayd Foren ‘ neem and Hugo Crave, Officers will be elected later. ; First State and. Savings Bank: |Chairman, E. A. Hartz; vice chair- . Metantora. State Savings Bank: President, A. P. Stokeer; vice president, \George Rossman; vice president directors, Hartz,'and cashier, Fred Donner; direc- F..M. Haddon, M. E. Hadley, J. L. | Lyle Montgoméry and .H. D. Seeley, Wal, Oxford Oxford Savings Bank: President, ‘en, Lawrence Smith, Lee and Ellery Laidlaw. North Branch , Pioneer Bank: Prsident F, C. Ballard; vice president, H. H. Harper; cashier, Maynard De- Grow; directors, Ballard, Harper, DeGrow, Raymond Ball, F. L. Bar- bour, D. S. Orr, Joe Harper Jr., and C.-W. Ballard. South Lyon State Savings Bank: Chairman, G. F. Miles; president, H. J. Long; executive vice and ¢ash- ier, R. H, Orr; directors, Long, Orr, Miles, D, H. Roberts, A. L. { Luksche and F, J. Wooster. Romeo Fent ta Romeo Savings Bank:. President, Chairman, an Savings oneal 'L, M. Kelly; vice presidents, H. D. ‘Rumsey and R. M. Howland; vice dent, E. C. Reid; vice presidents, | : ; 7, tn , . > president and cashier, K. D. Mosh- H. W. Hitchcock, R. F. Smith and er; directors, Kelly, Rumsey, E. O. E, Furman; cashier, Mary Ann Hill; directors, Pellett, Reid, Hitch- 3; ff Grey JE Mectin, HD. rs Furman, aC. E. odel. D. J-| palmer, D. S. Seasmn, F. P. Smith, uire and G. A. Wright. \L. J. Wilbur and James H. Church. Orion State Bank: President.! Brown City Savings Bank: Prest- O. C. Thomas; vice president and dent, M. L. Burkholder; vice: pres- cashier, W. H. Shoup; directors, | ident, C. E. Schoenshals; cashier, Thomas, Haddrill, Shoup, A. M.'F. W. Pepper; directors, Burk- Watson, H. F. Stahl and E. R. Mill-| holder, Schoenshals, Pepper, C, H. iman. Wendt and H. W. Glover. 88 Girls, 100 Boys Guests of Honor ROMEO = One hundred safety patrol boys and 88 service-squad \girls will be guests of honor at the elementary School's Club meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Romeo High Imlay City \School auditorium. Imlay City State Bank: President] Romeo police Chief, Gordon and cashier, D. N. Weiss; vice Osgood, will deliver a briet cashier, H. A. Pickford; vice pres- idents, R. E. Allen and J. H. Ach-| ten; directors, Tunstead, Pickford, Achten, Allen, M. G. Dunlap, L. M. Sutherland and Warren Smith. Ortonville Ortonville State Bank: Directors, William Narrin, John Waltz, Frank D. Brigharh, Linford Owen, D. L. Hamilton, David C. Pence and D. E. Schulz. Officers will be chos- en Friday evening. Fenton Hewell , McPherson State Bank:- Prési- dent, William McPherson III; vice presidents, William McPherson IV} and Robert H. McPherson; as- sistant vice president, Edward G. McPherson; cashier, Ralph Larsen; directors, Thomas B. Mann,. W. McPherson Smith Jr., Robert T. McPherson and Alexander M, Mce- Pherson. H. Your PTA Is Planni jmean with Dick Kopitzski and Dex- iter Mayworm as ushers. Martha’ | ng? Brick facing will be used on the e Brooklands Panel Talk; Fathers’ and Fun Nights \ | | | BROOKLANDS-AVON—The PTA, The Eliza Leggett School PTA! After honeymooning in northern East St. Clair street. here will meet at Brooklands|in Waterford Township will cele- - School tonight at 8 p.m. | brate Father's Night at 7:30 Thurs-: day. There will be a panel discus- sion, “A Child rowing “Recreation vs. Juvenile De- catty.” is s Growing Com: |. linquency”’ is the title of the talk | | | to be given by William Coulacos, | Refreshments are’ to be served executive director of the Pontiac afterward by the fourth grade poy’s Club. ‘mothers. The entire program will be under| the direction of Alvin Nicholson, | uno" father vice president of the Leggett: School PTA. | _ Waterford Township =‘ The PTA of Burt Schoo} will “Fun Night" Thursday at the gn orde? that the parents of! at_ the “NORTH BRANCH — Mr. and according to Philip Meach- Mrs. Wayne Locklin are announc- ing the engagement of their daugh- | ter, Diane, to Pvt. Robert Wayne school, an, x * i Center School a Ec mon 8 Night’ Carl Stuewer. Pvt. Stuewer is sta- Wye Army. Utica Girl =~ UTICA — Mr, and. Mrs. Herman Stern of St. Clair announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Dre Marie to Norman Mrosewski. is the son of Paul ; Mrosewski ‘OL apes. A May wedding is planned, ' Terry, sister of the groof, was front -facade, and parking will be| Bishop’s committee. Between 1930 and 1940 the Pacific presidents, H. Diehl, Myron Fancher and J. D. Morrice. Same! George Faulds was named (©04St States ved an 18.8 per men are directors, with the addi- speech of commendation after which he will introduce the spon- ;nounce the birth of a son, Stuewer, son of Mr,--and Mrs.|~ ‘flower girl. | ‘| The reception in the Knights of near the main’ office entrance— ‘Pythias Hall was attended by 300 also in the rear, Luscomb said. \guests. , ; j k kk | ‘Michigan they will be residing at! am Clayburn, Crescent Lake. County Births Almont Mr. and Mrs. Willfam Martin announce! me hae of a daughter, Judith and Mrs. Lester Monger announce the ‘birth of a son, James Attica and Mrs Felix Dombrowski an- Pelix Bill | Mr on Jan. 4. Capac Mr, and Mfrs. Lavern Capac announce te birth of a daughter, _JoEllen on i | cos Dryden “Mr. ‘and Mrs. Fred Bernat announce the birth of a daughter, Nancy Jean. l { Four Towns Mr, and Mrs, Robert DeLongchemp| announce the birth of a baby boy, | Jan. 2 at Bt. Joseph Hospital called | «|Mark Allen. | Imlay City Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Draves announce) ie “en of & daughter, Sharon Sue on Mariette Mr. end Mrs. Ruford Childers announce the birth of a daughter, Joanie ma Thomas “Mr. and Mrs. Dewey James announce | the birth..of @ daughter on Jan. 7 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Edwards ganpanet the birth of a daughter on Jan. 14, |car dealership into a bui Gives $5,000 for City Center | $1,000 assessed valuation, or less provided on the Gates street side} chairman of the committee; Gerald Deckham, freasurer and Donald Bethune, clerk. The owners ‘are moving their Ross Reynolds was appointed) ing ad- jacent to Garrison's showroom on jtion to held in Detroit in be February. — Unknown Donor _ Rebekchs to Install IMLAY CITY—The Rebekah Lodge No. 161 will hold eae of officers tonight. . Mrs. Cai Terry will be installing Wikcer New officers are: Noble grand, Mrs. Ned Burnett; vice grand, PLEASANT RIDGE—The bond, drive for a “badly needed” i$ 75,000 recreation center here has | gotten off to a flying start with /an anonymous donor contributing! secretary, Mrs. Goldie Moore; fi- nancial secretary, Mrs, Kathryn | Upleger and treasurer, Mrs. John, Francis Newton, recreation ‘Willey. County Calendar cost homeowners $2.43 for cach | Dryden Northwest Dryden its annual family chicken dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Barbor today at noon. , than $12 per family per year, if the bond sale was approved, _ Representatives, from every street will meet with Newton next week to plan ways of bringing the bond «issue to the people. Four Towns There will be no school at Four Towns 6f Jan. 24 and 25, due to the end of the semester. ‘Complete New Roads .* METAMORA — Metamora De- velopment Inc., subdivision east |of this village, reports the com-| pletion of its’ roads, with Lloyd) North America’s only known} !Andigon of Metamora doing. the diamond mine is located in work, ‘Arkansas.— Thomas Thomas Chapter OFS will have a Pay to Play- cata party at the OBS Hall in Oakwood on Saturday evening. zg delegate to the Diocesan conven-' Mrs. Bertha LePard; recording . | | | weTu. will have} ; cent population gain while the per cent. | NONA M. TAYLOR—~ © Mr. and Mrs. Clifford J. Taylor of Oxford announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Nona Marie, to James C. Aurand of Saline. son of Mr, and Mrs. Clif- ton A.. Aurand of. Bancroft. Plans are being made oad a September | Wedding. = = north west central states in the | same period increased by only 1.7 {Manuel DaSilda; vice president,) Schools Club president, Mrs. Clinton Scully; cashier, L. A.|Ralph G. Toles, will preside. Bechtol; directors, Neilson, Da-! Refreshments wilf be served and soring teachers of the two service units. They in turn will present captains .and licutenants from both local grade schools. ltion of H. C. Diehl. Almont Almont Savings Bank: President, Silda, Bechtol, E. R. Bristol, H. A.|Girl Scouts will act as baby sit- McCormick, Joseph Jacquin, A. ters. Westveld, Russell Lovell and George Yoshihara. (aavertonment) Armada More Comfort Wearing Armada State Bank: Chairman, FALSE TEETH Orvy Hulet; president, James E., Neely; vice president, A. B. Bow-| ieoee ws jate "Secomiare’ Past ETH. er; cashier, C. A. Plauman; di-| ® improved powder, sprinkled on , upper and lower plates h: h rectors, Hulet, Neely, Bower, Jo- ps Ll so that they feel ore come i i fortable, N seph Miller and E. A. Morrison. taste oe feeling. It's ive aikatine front acid). Does not sow Brighton “Page Brighton State Bank: President, odor” {denture breath) Ge Get TEETH today at any drug counter, i nn nN a ite sli nen Good Eyesight Is Precious PROTECT IT! An eye check-up is painless and involves only a few minutes. If it is found that you need glasses, we do the rest... from lenses to DR: H. BUSSEY ite — — f - f + 7 \ hI frames. Call for an appointment Optometrist _ today! , ' Eyes Exdmineq . Made to Your Exact Prescription suse» te Tare DR HAROLD BUSSEY, , “kei OPTOMETRIST ; > § “ty 7 yl. ieee “i m= alk . oe é a4 | wg % , sciatica iat: aes mall ih: sects: int tite le, tin. din, atin: Mia soem ahcien stil neiin, other’ tommn oh. onan kc, oN Wik wih de i hte ce et Ee ts ek ig te ce ee ; epee : SETI Te OR te ae ee _— ” , : — a. , _ . — a % ee +e oA eg ge big. i BE AEN See Be 1 caged p aigee eo ally Eee 3 me i ~ oy i e~“% li See are a Be i ge oe He PONS teh eg EO Mong Geo ay ag ty yar 4 ‘ if ‘ POEs 3 8 y - fi fi | Oe A ed eo 4 *~ . é ue ina pk eae? y per Baad bike ua : 4 . fi Z ; ¢ ; ¥ ij * . F oo ~ ' ia 4 ; oe - ra / Apply Lipstick Without Grimacing By JOSEPHINE LOWMAN tinies you ever slapped te think what grimaces we go through when applying lip rouge? We indulge in almost as many facial fortes é ( AP ee an : " \ “weg |. . R : dio nkey Re, THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. JANUA Y 16, 1957 eyrations. as a man does when This is wrong. When the skin “i shaving. We open our mouths |the lips is stretched out of shape) rather widely and stretch out |we cannot follow their normal con- lips. ay ; tour. The contour is distorted, Therefore we may end up with grotesque lines. d Instead .of this, we should open our mouth only alightly and relax the lips. ‘Then take. lipstick bresh} ~~ and outline the natural shape. Af ter that, fil} in. Be sure to take the. lip rouge all the way to the corners unless your lips are too long. Then stop just short of the corners but blendt— the color so that there is no sharp break. ie LEATHER | GOODS _14 W. Heron FE 2-2620 x * * Also, be sure to color the inside Tor The Hips far eriough hack so thaty= _Ithere is no break in this area, Many women who apply their lip- stick skillfully forget to remove The wrong way to apply lipstick is illustrated any which may have gotten on ab the left—the contour of the Tips isstretched-out-of —hheirteeth- panera ER ANODE rr cAT EG» OPIS, only si sli hily and Another hint—keep ih mind the relax the lips, ~ FSS Se pget that your teatares-shoulds beets. in balance, For instance if you D f M have a large nose and a small. m a mouth, it is easier to enlarge the a : es 0 - a ta iJames__Cross, assistant marshal; lips_than to minimize the large . Install Officers . |Mrs. Don Buzzard, musician, andj nose; When enlarging the tips} : Mrs. William Daugherty, guardian.| make the fullness or enlarged Officers were installed by Cor-| Also attending the meeting were| turve only the width of your inne Sisterhood 184, Dames of|/Mrs. James Schram, Mrs. Clyde) nose. romped ney aoe eat the and Mrs. Betsy Schouts. Here is a final quote from Mr. meeting of the Michigan Protec- | If your new wool rug sheds flutts sere oo w cman mee ck The tor’s Assembly, Dames of Malta.|of lint, don't decide something's ° Mrs. El Beards! All wool $ tend to close to the natural as possible but ; ; Ps dalled as first col as igs Pel | to this for a time. make as much of the natural: as| Scarf necklines add to the feminine look for ————— she can.’ New York fashions for spring. Delicate pastels and eta aurea eR ORE Se Slag She : learance. Pendleton SPORTSWEAR Bertram Barber, chaplain; Mrs. —_ If you would like to have my 4 ~ Bleaflet about make-up send al mate ning scarfs as well will be seen. s / BOLT EN DS Bears \stamped, self-addressed envelope | x 49 er JACKETS ; in ch UE iwith your request far leaflet No. é e |fotinetawtnan incre of The Por Ballet Dancers to A ppear Jitiac Press. kok te in Concert at Waterford Tomorrow: “Gives Special Help| SALE of Fine Fabrics Reg. to $$} \00 $19.95 \ to Those on Marathon.” Waterford Civic Musie Associa- years ago, was in with the Ballet Once-a-Year Chance to O rr as ‘tion will present its third concert! de Paris, He has also appeared ke . cane > wening in| 08 Broadway, beer a faculty SKI RTS SAVE up to 50 % Sandra Lee Runyan i tne Crane Nea tek vee " member of the High School of : ‘Isaac Crary Junior - School) por i Let us re-design and reupholster your furniture now... during Ma rks 2nd Birthday ‘auditorium. The Robert Joffre Y) na ohne ed Arts in New York, this sale eyent .. . add new beauty to your home at terrific | Theater Dancers will be seen in th! and alse an instructor at the Bal- savings, you'll be amazed how little it costs! Sandra Lee R unyan, daughter of let Theater School. 8:30 program in their first appear-|- Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Runyan of - Williams Lake road, was honored ™ recently on her second birthday Twenty-one guests attended the. vce in this locality, | His achievements include chor- Each member of the corps de’tography for TV shows and for the Serving Pontiac ° ballet is a coloist and all-around’ musical comedies produced at the ? ( Homemakers for } Over 23 Yedrs ‘ William Wright : Furniture Makers and Upholsterers $ party given by her parents entertainer in several styles of giant Aquatheater in Seattle, SWEATER JACKETS Ne ~ Re ‘ . , ballet. | In Mr Joffrey's company is Refreshments were served from . ; pany . % 270 Orchard Lake Ave. ¥ All Work a table centered with a teddy; Robert Joffery'’s first engage- Glen Tetley, an ex-newspaperman Phone FE 4-0556 Guerentood § Yours bear birthday cake ment, after leaving Seattle five |from Pittsburgh. He was trained in " . pee — - . . _ -|ballet by Helen Platova and in modern dance by Harwa Holm. He | ‘ has been leading dancer for five 9 * ’ years with the New York City 4 e Opera and has made many appear- ances on television. Beatrice Thompins is best known as soloist in the Baller Caravan, th American Ballet and the New York — 8 City Ballet. She has recently . . 4 ~~ ; ; rans oe . danced extensively in television FURN ITURE Save 20% on ] his Specially Priced Music and dance are combined / . in the caree’ of Joh. Wilson, an- . » other Joffrey dancer. Mr. Wilson SOFA SIMMONS MATTRESS — j fitarata inetd’ i 2" eography, to study music for a Maple Sofa f year in Geneva, to appear as vocal Colony B00 - WAS NOW and BOX SPR | NG! artist in recitals and with orches- 1 in brown, aqua waa $19800 $15900 ‘ . tras, and to compose a list of gold thread plaid. - original works in every congriv- able form. Dianne Consoer, »’ brilliant new soloist from Chicago, whe began her career in New York only a year age, has appeared on iead. ing television shows A preduct of the Joffrey train- ing ts Brunilda Rui: who has ap — peared with the dancers in every facet of their public life. Her‘ ap- pearances inciude ballet concerts en national televise proegrasiis and ballet workshops ‘ ie 87° Short Sleeve SWEATERS Reg. $ 00 igs. 5 Long Sleeve SWEATERS- $1055 $6 January Clearance WINTER COATS Regular $ $49.95 to $55 Regular $ $59.95 to $75 Regular § : $79.95 to $110 Lambswool hes £95 5 A : ull Cardigan Sweater Fashioned _ | Just One—Two—or a Few of a Kind Items . . . 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SOCOHOHSSHHSHSSSOHHHHHHSOESOEES This famous Simmons Mattreis and Box Spring « entiticatly deriqned ond a ~ . . constructed to assure comfortable, restful sieem--nm ght after right-—for wears Reg. $17.95-$22.95 Reg. $24.95-829.95 Reg. $34.95-$49.95 Famous STEIFF Stuffed Animal to come! The special savings 1s yours becauye the covering 1s @ discontinued ) pattern | ul ; " ss s)*) LEO THE LION . . Was $35 ; Wedding in your future? Come in and register your gut Now $24 : 5 0 Imported from Germany .. . real-as-life (al- most) —lion-sized (almost) lion that chil- dren love! pr elerence im omr BRIDE'S | REGISTRY | nos nents oe tae in CAR COATS — as = $10 - $15 - $17 SKIRTS 20OOSCCHOCHHEHCHHHEOHHOHHEOEHHE : ote ge ees hegre seemed ane NLL Let lt et ™~ . - mane ae ~ a eit . eed Regular $8.95 to $14.95 56 and Tom ODDS and ENDS TABLE } ur heiptul Bridal gi the enedncat balls for sank «ms _ , 1 ; _ ~ ! e ad ' P ira’y u ck one ~ bus ' - , . : a ote : oe at ee ome One Group — Values to $12.95 .........Now $5.00 /2 OFF—or more! 13 Bride's Rewty wa DENT SSLBANEE ohid cae - y ) Drastic reductions in odd pieces and close- , Dae ae oe © ‘ outs... fine: china and other items... ‘ Wiggs has so much more for the bode: new ‘hon the en geo: , oo . * + ¥e P PARK ee aaaaaaaaaanamannanaamaamanaeee = gh edendl t — REAR . | THATCHER of STORE Special Reductions _. OPEN TILL 9 PATTERSON MONDAY ond FRIDAY | & WERNET on Pictures and Lamps! , | | 24 W. HURON ST. - Demy a a a . : | : TELEGRAPH ‘at HURON my “Proms =Taes:r- Wed... -9.t0.6;-Thurs,, Fri., Sat. 9 to 9; Sun. 2 to. 5° ’ ’ i i ne ee a? ee ee Mur ms eS i a arate Se } x ANXIOUS MOMENTS — Coach Dick Bye of / goes an anxious moment while team manager Rd (foreground) does some fingernail chewing im the His grip on the towel relaxed a little later as AM last night's game between the Yellow Jackets ai the Dragons, 73-53. | Battle of Contene in Saginaw-PHS is pie conses predictions, coaches league which of the Saginaw Valley Conference: height ‘of the saw Pontiac and Saginaw as the Last wight two teams most likely to succeed Schos! ‘scoring ‘Bay Gry He this season. dj ol Dick The coaches had an eccurste| Senta, Salt Di crystal ball in this respect, but Trosens hetting now is the time to find out which ures will be the bride and which af the —_ two will be the bridesmaid. a aoe The_big meeting takes place at svc i... Lie 23% r Bene F ian = dcvctivem ° Eeetts fas A Ae — hitihoner Pave See Eee on " mae Date Pt Fe hy fed iy id Fert ee = — Seut Pars * He oh age they hy see Beer SM Ores Bape 5, page fx ’ Seats qeenernes ¢2Me ‘ ve win ENTER Pontiac Press Photo “ANXIOUS MOMENTS — Coach Dick Bye of ‘Avondale: under- goes an anxious moment while team manager Robert -Palmateer (foreground) does some fingernail chewing in the 2nd period of His grip on the towel relaxed a little later as Avondale trimmed ‘Jast night's game between. the Yellow Jackets and Lake Orion. the Dragons, 73-53. ® 8 a . In Jaginaw- . LidS In pre-season predictions, coaches league which can match the of the Saginaw Valley Conference| height of the PHS quintet. saw Pontiac and Saginaw as the} Last night Saginaw set a new two teams most likely to succeed school scoring record in whipping @ue season. Bay -City Handy, 101-55, with) Blondin and Dick Yates each get- The coahes had an © | ting 19 points and three other crystal ball in this respect, but Trojans hitting in the double fig- now is the time to find out which) ures. - will be the bride and which of the | + Terry Sawehuk would ple: -National..Hockey. Le pRY lhis mind and stay wit san Decision After- NHL Honors that hopeful today decision to quit at the Coach Milt ‘Schmidt dqclined an official statement until jafter an afternoon practice, whil¢ sensus among stunned mmates was that Sawchuk wogld change the club. The 27-year-old, netrpinder, a three-time Vezina (trdéphy win- ner, suddenly decided, to quit hockey yesterday — a few hours after he had been announced as the NHL alj star goalie in mid- season voting. . The Sawchuk failed to repart for| 72-53 “aise Shaw's, Griff's FIRST AND 10 — Lake Orion forward Jim Drake looks like he’s about ready to be brought down by an unidentified Avondale tackler in the 1st quarter of their Oakland B League basketball game Tuesday night at Avondale. Jackets defeated Orion president Walter Brown of his in- tentions. Next he visited Schi1idt, who was ill, and said he plained to return to his home in a L2- troit suburb. . x * * However, Sawchuk remained in _| bowling will carrythe competition . |srours, and 2,330 single:, entries ~ | fall: and handicap scores, An all- Take City Games sx Alma, South ‘nn st A record number of entries in every division will be shooting for the biggest purse in: the history! ofthe _Michigan. Elks — Bowling Tournament when the 37th annual event gets under way in Pontiac Saturday afternoon. Eight successive weekends of bowling pes familiar home alleys.) The Little Horns, who copped first place in the handicap division with a. 3071 score at Saginaw last! winter, are entered again spon- sored by Chuck’s Shack. Lockage Store for Men in Muskegon will also be out to through March’ 10° before ~ the champions are crowned. The en- tire program will “be conducted by Pontiac Lodge .810, A total of 517 teams. 1165 doubles) actual pinfall standings. It won with a 2839 total last year, All but one individual champ are expected back, : Returning winners are the Niles state Goubles combination of E. Deeds- prize money which totals $14,990. year in actual pinfall, the doubles Trophies and cash. awards will] handicap duo of Ed Baes and: Dick) .w be presented to the winners in| Masters, of Lansing, and two each: division for both actual pin-| . z events winner will be determined by actual pinfall. Host Pontiac Holds a big edge in the entry list with a total of 106 teams, 204 doubles units, and 408 singles. Royal Oak, Kalamazoo, Muskegon, and Lansing “are other cities well represented. - Another first in an Elks - bowl- ing tourney will be the appear- ance of a group from Sault Ste. Marie. Bowlers will also be here from Farmington. Ferndale, De- troit, Saginaw, Flint, Bay City, Traverse City, Sturgis Boston overnight although he was not avajlable for comment. Friends reportedly were attempting to get him to reconsider. . ; The goalie’s. decision to quit became known shortly after the Bruins announced that Norm De- felice was being recalled from Jewelers Near Century | Mark With 97-47 Win; Grill Rally Pays Off Shaw’s Jewelers almost touched * the century mark last -.night and) Hershey in the American Hockey |Griff's Grill skipped past Bestway league for tomorrow night's (in adult City Lea game against the Detroit Red games at Pontiac High. Wings at Boston Garden, | The undefeated Jeweler power- ihouse rolled to a 97-47 victory ov er Schmidt- was quoted at the time’ Booth Homes in American League! Saginaw has one of’ the better two will be the bridesmaid. | balanced scoring teams in the The big meeting takes place at) SVC with Blondin, Yates and Bill Pontiac High Friday night and it will be roughest encounter of a figures. pa or ine ch ie Ste RAC PHS officials announced there play, and a 51 1, must win! has been a great demand for to gain afirst place with the | tickets. The Ducats have been PHS., For the Chiefs, a victory made available at Osmuns down-, Id mean a two game lead | *°¥2 until 5:00 p.m. Friday, or'| with a second half schedule of Halliday averaging in double S''8!n with sometaing on his in double-figured scoring with D until they are all gone, and at the| Wings in a nine-player deal after high school from 2:30 to 4:00 until/the 1954-55 season, as saying that Sawchuk “seems 10’, tion for its 6th win of the season. be laboring under an emotional|/cnaw's had half a dozen players, mind.” “We're bringing up Defelice because we think Sawchuk can benefit from the | rest” Schmidt said, Sawchuk, obtained from the Red Sebring's 17 points at the top. Griff's overcame a 16-10 Ist quarter deficit to defeat Bestway 44-41 in National League play. | Bestway’s 4th peried rally was | too little and too late. The loser’s | Gerland Spangler took is ..considered| honors, with 13 points. | e basketball ‘i champion in the event and will “in PGA Tournament six league games to play. | "The Trojans have a big veteran team with seven lettermen back from last year. * Just after opening game of the season however Saginaw lost its Thursday. accepted. Game time is 8:00 p.m. jand second place Detroit by two | Friday. the key to Boston's championship x* * ke hopes in the tight NHL race. The Bruins trail the first place Mon- Nephane orders “are being|treal Canadiens by five points, points high-scoring-center Bill Frost for | disciplinary reasons. | His sudden loss hurt Saginaw in| its only loop loss to Flint Northern) by a five point margin, 53-48, but since then the Trojans have recovered and have swept by| Arthur Hill, Flint Central and Bay) City Central. Led by Deb Bilondin, second only to Pontiac's Dave Diehm in the SVC scoring race, Saginaw is probably the only team in the ace : MICHIGAN HIGH SCHOOL 2 Central 56 nes Tiaree Guus 80, barosa Berrien Springs ° “Solome "38 6. 2.) well 55, Weidman 53 = Deeg S Corunna 52, Du i 4 aginew 101, City Handy 55 jiedwin 58. pestering’ (7 , Minoso’s Annual Feud Major League Holdout | War Officially Begins By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS jmost of the top line players are The major league holdout front/C°™#ing into the fold without argu- opened officially today when out-|ment. New York Yankee star Mic-| fielder Minnie Minoso began his|K¢Y Mantle sent back ,his first! annual tug-of-war with the Chicag \contract, but his case isn’t re- White Sox. ° garded as serious — yet. Some of Minoso's past battles with the Sox front office have ap- Cousy and Johnston : Pace Win for East proached comic-opera . proportions, | BOSTON ® — Playmaker Bob and this one appears headed that way right off. x * * The White Sox received Mi- noso’s unsigned contract from Ha- vana yesterday with the notation: intended for the Minoso of 1953 _Class D activity at. Lincoln! Junior High found Green's P & H,| mer National Open winners and a| Doodlebugs and Central Christian) fock of other ex-titlists, all winning by wide margins. } Frank Wilson's 13 points featured) Green’s 45-21 decision over the|McLead, George Sargent, ° Elks and. Arch Bell netted 15 points Burke and Tony Manero. to pace the Doodlebugs to a 51-23 | To be eligible for a place a pro- ‘triumph over Home Lunch Inter- | golfer must be. 60 or more Play-| national League contest. Berrios vs. Cadilli ’ in Televised Bout ° BOSTON — Rugged Miguel | Berrios of Puerto: Rico, a top-| ranked contender for Sandy Sad-| dler’s featherweight title, meets’ stylish Gil Cadilli in a scheduled ics Building~ Berrios and Cadilli will be mak- bout will be telecast nationally,| ABC, with Boston. stations blacked out. rto Rican, managed Cousy and shotmaster Neil John- ston make such an unbeatable com- Basketball Assn. players are grate- or 1954, not the one who had such a fine season in ‘Y956. Please send corrected contract.’ Vice President Chuck Comiskey went along with the “gag. The fabulous pair made the dif- ference last night in carrying the |East to a 109-97 triumph over the . < Owendale 70, Frankenmuth 2 aeest Community 61, Huron Town-' : “Moserile 83 S peneaict 6, Pontiac/ yy St. Frederick 7, . Clement “ - West Bioom ackan ‘o Johns’ eats! 56, Hanover Horton 26 phelses, ¥ Binawal wyoming Pork 57 Hasticgs 56. Godwin ip ne Custer PH} iteh Mart 20 Baid win “2 rustin 4 Alma 47, St. Johns 42 Troy 62, Clawson 39 Dearborn Reesevelt 73. Oak Park 23 ee Oak St. Mary 64, Bt Rita 32 . p Ree ge My 38, onl ai Oak Shrine ery 58, St. James) a 73... san Orion 53 Bath 54. Dewitt 53 igons 47, Sunfield 45 AN COLLEGE SCORES By the Associated Press Hopé 93, Eatuieere 73 Warne State 16, Eastern Michigan ° ‘etre me 86, Michigan State ad CC 85, Highland ‘Pork, bid Spring Marbor JC 74, Grand Rapids OTHER COLLEGE BASKETBALL ~ Duque Colgate * 18, Connecticut 94, New ‘Hampshire 54 LaSalle 57, West Chester 51 Bucknell 76, Albright 50 Holy Cross 83, cyensette Marines 76 tes 88, Brand: ippery Rock ro Alliance (Pa) 6 South North Rae #3, N.C. es 5? _. Vir %. South Carolina 7 Ric oe 70, Geo Washing ton 67 Wash. Lee 86, P Brrebyeeria ad St. Louis 91, Drake Miamt | eather Setnation $0, RS 81 1, Texas ; ohn Seat 5, ee 53 Washington dahe 70 oe ‘4 pe tee. al St.! “The Vest in the seventh annual all-star 1t/84me at Boston Garden. Cousy, the 6-1 Boston Celtics’ ‘backcourt ace, won the game’s| “Minnie is right,” he said. icontract should be corrected. should be addressed to Saturnino| Orestes Arrieta Minoso.” {most valuable player award for | 16 x * * |the second time. He has appeared re Minoso, who batted .316 last | in each of the gll-star shows to| ay year, reportedly was offered_$32,- date and was named MVP in 1954. /000, the same ag last’ year. | -_-_-_—. With The exception of the Wash-| Coach Johnny Jordan of Notre ington Senators, none of the major, ‘Dame experienced his first losing, league clubs has come up with|season in five years during the) any serious holdouts as yet and Hlast basketball campaign. ful they aren't teamed regularly.|a The Puert Jimmy Angelo who handled for. mer heavyweight contender Rol-| “It looks like this: contract waSibination that opposing National|and LaStarza, is seeking a shot at Saddler’s title. Angelo as ned $15,000 guarantee to t crown against Berrios, PP aaa +S FIGHTS latent Press ura "pracH — Chico oo er 33, amford, Conn, jcutpolted vizal, sr Freeland, Pa. Richmond, Calif. — Rirben: Hernandez, | | 3 A bya Angeles, stopped Johnny Heard, ich | HARTFORD, Conn, — Corrado Manc vi Fioridia, Sicily, knocked on Bit Dooley, ‘148, Capetown, sous Michigan quarterback, to boost Lits| stand-point of: ire Jon Haaven, North Dakota cen- ter, holds the Loyola of Chicago fieldhouse scoring record. As a sophomore -in 1953 he made 38 points in one game. as eee Police Mistake Oklahoma's Star as Wanted Thug | * PHILADELPHIA (®—Two city idetectives buttonholed — Oklaho- ma’s All-America football star | Tommy McDonald - yesterday | thinking they had a long-sought | bandit—but the identification was a fumble. x *&* * McDonald was in town to re- ceive the Maxwell. Award as col- lege player of\the year and stopped into a downtown air- lines’ office to buy a ticket to Detroit where he is to attend a March of Dimes banquet tonight. A girl clerk took a long look at McDonald and motioned to the detectives in a backroom. They |}-were waiting there on a chance of catehing—the ‘‘good-looking” Jone-wolf bandit who has been preying on' women clerks in city airline offices apd | loan compan- ies. been the ‘lone wolf’’ bandit who pact with the Eagles. MISTAKEN IDENTITY — Tommy McDonald (left) halfback from Oklahoma had detectives closing in on him at the Philadelphia airport. when an’ airline ticket saleswoman thought .he might have sketch is that of the bandit. McDonald was in Philly o sign a pro Pf Ws, GR Dw posing, (me! ne eS . aa es, Py : i . Ee: . & AP Wirephoto has been preying on women. The 10-round bout, tonight at Mechan-| | Joseph, Alpena, Ann Arbor, Battle Creek, Port Huron, Plymouth, Benton Harbor, Big Rapids, | Petoskey, Otsego, Owosso, Cadil- lac, Dearborn, Niles, Mt. Pleasant, | Grand Rapids, Hillsdale, Monroe, Midland, Holland, Ionia, Manistee, and Jackson. | kk & * A Pontiac team is the defending have a good chance to repeat 228 Senior Pros DUNEDIN, Fla. (# — A record! |228 golfers, many of them the big-! igest names in golfdom just a few] - jyears ago, have signed to play) ir. the annual PGA Seniors Tour-| rament here Jan, 25-27. The entry list includes five for-| entered are Gene Sarazen, Fred| John McHale, repeat its. title in» the team |. NOW A TIGER — Jim Finigan (seated) ac- | quired by the Detorit Tigers in a five-man Former National Open champs. trade this winter, signed his 1957 contract with ‘Tigers Director of Player per- eg. ‘Meet Wylie McClellan the tournament hegiere: who tied hir-the top siet manager. 4. Earl “Cap” Holli- in actual pinfall for singles. Walter Mitchell, of . Ann Arbor, and Saginaw resident Reuben Grover {both finished with 656. Not sched- uled to compete is 1956 Pape handicap victor Frank Daigle, of Muskegon. . oe, Se ee ‘ Bowling each paar will be tourney to Pontiac this year, is R. D, Bonnell, National, Presi- dent of the Elks Bowling Associa- tion, Michigan leader Robert Ralph ict and ‘Pontiac's held on Saturday and Sunday ‘with|Exalted Ruler Jack M. Bender 36 alleys in use at the Elks Temple will pres at the tourney. Ten and Huron Bowl. Team play will be limited -to-the-Elks= with -the’ doubles and singles keeping the Past Presidents are expected to be on hang. It is the biggest . single event ee pg pe: The -event will be operated under the direction of general chairman Russell.M, Dedd with turning in an all-out effort to. make At the biggest tournament ever, ‘ m= * » AP Wirephote sonnel and Spike Briggs (right) looking on. Finigan hopes to get a crack at third base with Ray Boone switching to first. Billy \‘Happy to Be With Tigers’ ers’ ages range up tc 7 range up tc 73. Ends Job ob Confab- HOUSTON, Tex. # — ore Giese, foofball coach~-at- Sout Carolina, was expected to wind unl ‘conferences with the University; of Houston officials today over the coaching vacancy at Houston, DETROIT —"‘Great to be with |a winner’ goes the old baseball great to be with a coygtender. ‘Oscar’ Goes to Levely | The 28-year-old infielder, who |signed his 1957 contract yesterday, Floyd Levely won the ‘Oscar’.at calls his trade to the Detroit ithe Pontiac Toastmasters Club Tigers from the Kansas City Ath-| ing their New England debut. The meeting last night at the YMCA. | iletics ‘‘a wonderful break.” Fini- \Theme of the meeting was ‘“‘What'gan and relief pitchers Jim Bun-| ‘a Genius.’ " ning and Al Aber are the latest to. jsaying. But for Jim Finigan, it's! Finigan Enters Fold * jcome to terms, bringing to 21 the is in ‘‘the best physical shape of number of Tigers in the fold. |My career and looking forward to There’ : ssure (4 800d year.” | on the, eck. bein a eheldet Bunning has compiled a 9-3 rec- who banged out a .302 patting ord pitching for Marianoa in. the average in his first season in the | jwinter league in Cuba. He is the majors, slipped to .255 and then |!ague leader in earned runs with to .216 last season. He will scrap | 1-48 mark. with young Reno Bertoia for the -_ : Maple Tankers Win regular third base job, with the Tigers planning on using Ray | Boone at first base. bythe decaldedge during 1957 and its memibers—are_ Third EML Contest weight champion to defend. ete | “But it'l be a lot different play- ing with a club that’s going some-| Accounting for all but ong. 1st 0 len ea [Ss lio | where,” said Finigan. ‘‘A player place and setting two pool and tries to maintain confidence in school marks, Birmingham's high to Boost Grid Fortunes | BERKELEY, Calif. ( — Thejtor of the Associated Students, ,.| University of California looks to-|tola newsmen, ‘We felt Elliott had. day to young Pete Elliott, former| aij the qualifications from the! technical know- in the Pacific ledge,. personality and philosophy | that we wanted.” Elliott served football fortunes Coast Conference. x * * . as assistant ‘Elliott from Nebraska with a 1950 and at Oklahoma from 1951 three-year contract estimated at| through 1955. about $18,000 per year. x * * Pete directed the Cornhuskers| A ti t Bl last year in his first season aS/p native of Blocmington, Il.,! head coach and had been voted aj/ ft, Won 12 varsity pay raise to $14,500 there. His club’. Michigan, four each in football, | had a record of 4 victories and) basketball and golf Graduated in| 6 defeats with a 33 mark in the 1949, he was awarded the Big Ten Big Seven. |medal given annually to the seni- Succeeding 54-year-old Lynn 0.0 “ho compiles the highest schol- “Pappy’ Waldorf, the split-T ad.| 2stic average and contributes the lvocate becomes the 2ist and)™0St to his alma mater. youngest head man ir California’s! Engelhard said Elhott was one grid history. jof six coaches under considera- Waldorf took the Golden Bears tion during ‘the recent NCAA to the Rose Bowl in 19, 1950 and, meetings in St. Louis, but admit- 1951 but ‘last season they finished \ted that not all of the six were next to last in the nine-club PCC, available, The first time Pete ns a 2-5 record. He announced|talked with the California inter- his retirement before the season) Viewers was just eight days ago, the athletic director said. r | jended. x & kk, Athletic Director Greg ..Engel- hard announced late last night ‘Bunning: Aber that Elliott had accepted the Cali-| Signed f or ‘57 fornia pact and had been approved unanimously by the executive DETROF?: r — Relief pitchers committee .of the Associated Stu- Jim Bunning and Ai Aber have dents of U. C.,:the group making|Signed their 1957- ejntracts: with, the final decision, the Detroit Tigers. Immediately after that Nebras-, The signings antdunced yester-, ka said backfield Coach Bill Jen- day;-bring. to 21 thy number of nings would succeed Elliott. Bengals who have returned signed) ope. Hastings, executive direc-| 1957 contracts. ‘ | ’California lured the 30-year-old) coach at Oregon State in 1949 and| letters at) {planning to just have intramural himself, and you fight the best school swimmers last night Comw_ Ed Proct & G 6 low choice 20.00-27.00: utility and stand-'phea jin 1949, | Con Edison 446 Pure Oil . 424 1.00; 1} and low utility! Con WN: s ., 42 RCA . $3.7 |aruey 0-00. 15 "00. some. under 70 Ibs! * * * . €onsum Pw .. 485 Repub. Stl 53.6,cull under 10.00. | MERRITT A. HILL ‘ cont eas $37 Rex Drug .. 101] Sheep — Salable ,700. General. trade) David Sarnoff, RCA chairman, Cont OM iz6g Reyn Met. . $33) very active, all interests buying: slaugn- said the action was taken_at the padidees Rng : se Royal Dut . 41.7 sheep 50-1.00 higher for two days, small | request of Folsom, who had - in- oF rd Tra { 'f ‘Names Curtiss Wr ... sei ad Pep , 32 1 et ss: ond coed (time wevied formed him of his intention 0 C 0 Det Edison 1. 38.4 fe 384 jambs under 110 Ibe, 20 00-21 00. other [retire from active service after . a c Doe ch {2° 892 Sears Roeb.. 277 ewes unevenly 5.00-8.50 jhe reached retirement age in two 0 General Manager Du Pont RSL Shell onl 1) —— iyears. Sarnoff added: as ¥ oor , * he . “ee Fl “uta Lb 331 Sou Pac .,... 45) CHICAGO LIVESTOCK He asked that his successor - Faith at tg Sta B Rd .... 224) CHICAGO. Jan 15. (AP) — iU 8 De- as president be selected at this The appointment of Merritt D. rb Mor St ran = _ bie t i e Pood Mach... 78 Std Ol Cal. 455 20 gq0° acuves. butchers and sows 25 time to permit an orderly transi- Hill as general manager of the Ford Mot ..,.. 542 Std Oil Ind .. 59.645 59° higher: shipper buyers carrying ” Ford Tractor & Implement Division | . Frueh Tra... 23 Std Oil NJ 57.1] ethe? broad orders and taking weights’ ition in management. be . I , Ford | Gardner Den. $92 Std Of Oh .. 545 [NNO Soo Th Gct sales 1-3 mainly 2-3 |has en announced by Henry Ford Gen Bak... 93 Sturd Pack .. qy.g| butchers 190.350 Ib. 18.00-18.50; several . [Il, president of the Ford Motor: Gen Eléc ...., 854 Swift & Co. |lots No. 1-2 200 Ib. down 18.75: 75 head Grain Prices ‘0. Gen Pds ..... 413 gyiv El Pd... 434 imixed No. 1-2 22@ Ib. 18.85; latter price I Hill ‘native of Pontiac i Gen Shoe. 35a Texts, $9, SR iotimainiy 3-9 17-75-1800; some imostiy. 2] CHICAGO GRAIN r tly ; 7 ‘na.| ‘ Gen Shoe ..,.. 25. n° mainly 2- so 4 3 rmer sistant general mana-| + ‘ Gen Tel ...... 41-4 Tex @ Sul -. “30°6 350 ‘Ib. 18.25 and slightly above: 280-330| CHICAGO, Jan. 15 (AP) — Opening|o, y assis & 7 Gen Tire’ .212) «2.4 mo pd’) 92.9,1D. 17.251775: Irager lots mixed grade grain prices: iger, succeeds Irving A. Duffy who . a Giiette coe a Timk R 4 96.2) sos 350-550 Ib. sows 15:75-16.75; mostly, Wheat— Mar. ...¢.,.. T9t/has been named to the newly-es- | ’ . ; sees ' Goodrich .,.. 69.1 aren we ; isi Salable cattle 7,500; calves 200: steers May poorer May Rye 7 772 tablished position of group vice | , . Goodfear ..... 174 went Cen |_| 246 Slightly irtegular, generally fully steady, july Mar. .... .. 1.491%4/president. ; ‘ § Grah Paice... 15 on Carbid 111 | but choice over 400 b. steers only steady; May 3 | oe . “8 Un Pao. a and spots 25 higher on choice under Mar gra he - A resident of 965 Glengary Circle : : Gres a ae Unit Air Lin . 38.8 1100 Ib.: hetfers and cows moderately May 130% Jan. .....,.. 15.55 ‘Fast, Birmingham Hill was asso-| Homestk 37.6 Unit Airc ag.4 active steady to 25 higher bulls and | ary sedees te Mar eooe, 1580 ciated with the General Motors 100 M3 Unit Fruit 47.1 vealers fully steady: stockers and feed- 3¢p..._ 944 MAV veeeeee 15.90 | ™ vene i “S , . ‘ Tivcente oo ah) Ua Gas Go... 2/ery scarce: few sates steady. few te; nes uly ULI Corp, before joining Dearborn Mo- , % J Anes « c . : tae cag) US Rub. ...,, 456 1250 Ib. steers 27-50-2625: bulk good and! lors Corp, in 1947 as general sales Inland Stl .... 914 US Steel . 66.6 choice 18.25-23.00: choice largely 20.50 z ay - Inspir Cop .... 53 West Un Tel ..193 up: some standard steers 15.00-17.75; Pilgrim Holiness Opens /manager. 1] Interak Tr... Weste A BK .. 302/load of, prime 1050 Ib. heifers 23.25; mont! AA: d-Winter C d | Duffy’s new’ position puts him ° Int Bus Mc 514 vestg El .., 55.4!high ehoice and prime 21.75-22.50; good j Int Harv 381 Wilson & Co’ 13 ito avermes choice 17 50-21 ds- stanton! | I inter Crusade lin charge of six Ford Motor Co. ; : “Int Nick. 199 Woolworth ... 45.1 heifers 14.50-16.75: most utility and com-; ‘divisions, including the Tractor & ° . . Int Paper 104.2 Yale & Tow .. 297) mercial cows 10.25-12.50: few high com-| DRYDEN—A mid-winter crusade] [mpl Div ~ In ork Goal. 406 Zen b Ree T 112.4) mercial cows to 13.00; canner’ and cute will be held at the Pilgrim Holi | mpiement —. bd sl Crk Coal .. 446 Zenit ++. 95.4 ters 8.50-11.00. utility and commercial ; | | 1 _Johns Man .., 46.7 | bulls iis 3400-16 00: Ptr and choice vealers ness Church, tonight through Jan.' : -_ . 21 utility and sta i€ ; STOCK ay emaees 3 [00.0 load of gond “and chotce 800| 24. There will be services ‘each 3 : . ib, feeding steers 18.50. u “| 7:45 | - * . 7 Tade pen teu ste ks jevering beginning at 1:45, The! . ; . Previous Day . 2600 1321 73.8 179.9 Rev. R t. W. Wolfe of Indianapolis, . * Week Ago ......2623 1340 73.5 181.2 Ind. will be s ic ; Month Ago... 302 1a20 13) no. Poultry jind the speaker and music, # DELICATESSEN . ; ear Ago 2527 133.3 72:3 1769! |will be furnished by the Rev. and, . i : There’s a Club for Ever one 1956-57 High ..276.3 155.1 76.9 191.5 | DETROIT rovLTRY Mrs. Gerald McDonald of Fern-| 67 W. Huron St. 9 ° . vi & ¥ Bes Trine SETS ABA SST AALS pgRETROIT Jan. 15 Prices dal eres Stl ume ; igh ......287.8 1424 75.7 1815, i ces| dale. . ‘ paid per pound. f. o. b. Betrnit, for No. 1) ‘ . ) 1958 Low sees 03.1 114.9 67.2 148.8 eusitty live poultry up to m. * DEPOSIT RECEIVE DETROIT STOCKS ens few 21 Hent ‘type yo A sl i ott sneeeneeneeimee iE ot _For Sal Howes 48) foe wie Ouse we genes asm | Buy Thru‘Partridge | c ee to ie Thru Partridge - . x ce tor 81500 Nag ve NOT! age |. = Th Pp ; id = HING. aoe by ¢ oe < : uy ru Partridge enly. we wil fo 7 “the Thru ak Alin 5. “toed, Bota Sea ek a ee ee * Smatt earnest. Ou 30000. RED. D_ HORSE CORP. j ee 08 MONTHLY pon era ul ob eS baths, large living room and dine — - INCL. TAXES & TRAN tng room with waif to wall car) & g and drapes . Also ; = . 4; INTEREST car e, large lot. $25,500 as ; : THIs 1 BEDROOM HOME WEAR terms. or appointment, / . > Saeeenae © ence Lor {WESTSIDE fg . Lo FO BUY, 3 ; ranch “only 3. i. Yat . ae Eevee ace YanE, abte | aout "ate Naya : pg SEATEW s ONLY §9.-| spect. Plasiered walis, gleaming 10 alee ¥, PULL PRICE WITH seaMe. oak floors, tile —. latge rec. : bo SS 1) iikgeniare POSSESSION. CALL Sat, 1% : : a a ‘ in basement, HOLMES-BARTR AM area heat, ars garage, beautiful tot, $14,900 inh rota Bit efrig. fura, Inquire 100 8, Hureo, — Le : ing area, SEK. Meben ea | gs : 4 3 % ont ent Apts. F Furnished rs oe = A tweok, Bh Peasley Hi : wicAue OePis A ; ee. wa: —. / . re: BA, SAE as | See "Stark . ERS, ; " Or s0 down plus costs, new 3 bed- room home with basement, paved = immediate possession Cail. 1887 or EM 3-3353.) 3° BEDRM_ BRICK, FULL -BASE- ; VACANT tT OFFICE SPACE IN THE in the “in _ to yy carpeting aces & Men Thea.e: = see _ $2 fas peo SS 2 ‘ Se as Pee ae = = z ie aS ‘ . _at 545 N. E, Blvd, ‘ - : = 2 ack for M fark Se “Tein eton, Realtor re tun FOR SALE BY OWNER: {: NEAR naan Ht bai ges ices satis (Af , ee Ott«*«édi Poe =, | a fe | Fa oss a ge. kitchen / = ; : :. sig: “ow z 400 * ACTS. | 9 , IRN. APT. By ROOMS. : = ao 4 ‘ ob O, 7 weh Baill aly, 387 Oxmun, Call’ va cAy : pos: and a6 t living =." sum: ‘hum storms aod down | payment. OR 3 3-@135, 43/3 © RMS. AND BATH. ° 3, YRS. i Ginette. Storms and screens. = r ROOMS po TH -" M. Reg: US. Pat: Of. oat : aca dw M. Stout, Realtor. = fare hs pate bedroom starter hom lot. -; ps at = COLORED, 7 RM. MODERN W Toons Near. oo ; rage. FE 5-3078 or FE. 2-2162.| 1967 by WEA Gerviee, ns. Ro. No finance charges, . 5 'HITCOMB, oe roker. ¥e 1 ; IMMEDIATE SALE, BY OWNER But, Nancy' ens one's } mother is . d id - 7 FE 5 SERN ~ay } BEDRM_ 7-ROMM BRICK home, with sterms 7 , | Pa her rzasiern a igh, am oe IDE City of Wa — ie ge can't get out of #2" i ia ee se e. id brick i : i . - oe 1 = _or land pwn By id co on Gone oe Paes Geen | contract. assume garage > | ae a CO. |? CLEAN Rx niewcrke wor stom “sooei- |< Miser $2 2 ._poreem Fe + apartment and the balance of the | Payments. MA S3i¢i.___. For Sale Houses 43, For Sate 2)°™ "ees 17s 7 -_ . ide family home or PPA dA ste * , vr. OR, would divid int re? agent wesid divide sesily imo income} MACEDAY G ARDENS | sy owner, 3 BEDRM. BRICK, Florida, ex ond ‘es me 6 oat 9 yrs cd. as screened porches, lire alarm sys- Nr, Williams Lk. large 5 rms. ot. furnace fireplace, basement, — Be cnet. 24On? Bei Es garage. tem. Gas Janitrol beat, almost| fireplace, large living rm, base-| Near Unien ik Village. $9.500/. OF t 2 NICE LARGE Ooms. _Sédition if a jo BET Double RN e., 30 ft moms, oll furnace, 100 ft. lot. $1,000 dn. No dealers, EM 30353 BS - ae 2 Tg” Nort ¥,- garage, 200 5 6 alton | Sesin ; erms 7 . i ~~ 7 Seae acy aa sasewent,| R ‘Royal | Oak Shrine Area L. . a $1,000 DOWN MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | Geach” ‘Peeveor 2 ‘a tne ONLY. close § "Auto. hot water, $18 he brick ety Carpet- AKEFRONT Neat 2 bedrm., oil furnace, 60 ft. | aa vai - 3 Flor ¥.. Drayton Plains. ‘ Drapes. builtin 50x200| On Pontiac Lake. 2 bedroom ma-|_ ot. immediate + 0 cepemaaa Nr. BY 0 rei agin pe HOEK: Sates ce at sonry oe ann i ‘il heat, 1g] Crese ' to: 3 Sedroom rand * ¢ ROOMS AND BATH wine 2/WIIL BUILD car garage, built to last life- PONTIAC CRE Al TY rooms, Pe baths | blocks of ‘bwn. Available for = neith time. On large ot with circle ~ "ect. Lake av “BATH. % Emamatinie sccuoancy 0" ger| 0 Zour Wot, 3.or 2 Wodvoum start] drive. your comers nd enley- | Toa CALE COTE 4 as! HAPPINESS | seus ai TH) re sen, eee sere eed es soene. Ne dove seve payment. Or will | - Here gg: ent Pn oe ee FOR ne ion SI TE * ey. |i aM ‘aces TE “NT “MEN ‘ pesoment Peed build on our Jots with sinall down what Wend pen tor sonnet ~ar se trvE “2 +2036, meas. eee _ FR ae BRICK. NEAR ORCHARD mea * iM TATE, POSSESSION! Six well located lots 402120 ft. each, LOCATION DELL XE, A | 2 T ROOM. abcde VY af Au.) erty te Paddle ir ee ge bath on Ist. : city water, sewer, over 30,000 aq NEAR OAKLAND AVE Must be; .. § ROOMA | u ft. of space, fast developing ieee Wisner and Lincoln Jr: High at ven Ate Any WEL- pt. w dr 4 5 ate Lake, all mod- vessel! Youn I I } ries tion. Only $4,400 with $1,400 down. | tractive 4 roam und bath. 2 bee ee: . 7 5 | come. 0 pM -g hens “ EM ° room ho full basement VANT TO ELL? = 3-154 ; : NORTH SIDE ‘ m home with . sent ent. . ae / 4, ROOM APT. FE month, Call MODERN HOUSE, $60 REALTOR-BUILDER ealtor. FE ROM F forced aif heat. 22 ft. encloses ar ii “Te 8 ee FE tals, SE, 960 «12 w. Huron FE 4-425 th” Tele no Becnit | Four welt located lots 60x18) {| porch landscaped jot with ga- MAVE CLIENTS FOR =, SF i Multiple Listing 'S Service bd each. a, o"eaae in close | page Offered $6 950 st. bos \ ? ele “APT. Via wT CLEMENS: ‘ee Gls i Bepase, HOME “IN” PERRY | 4'\'O)' , | down OWNER Teavino erate - Commercial building with fy age FE Ste. Sie Park. $850 do $6502. AVON “GARDENS SUB. . . 27200 aq. ft. to lease ob oe aR | PRivATE “ENTR: TRL APT House oNroRN.| foot Wo Me's ® Wire sacmirice 7 BEDROOMS, “LARGE | Meal mulng ae ee FO OR a “ | Slo -_ a at eg ~ e. : x ae 3 & kitchen and living Pur. aoe 17! nee water. Only NEAR BALDWIN AVE Lake bene on we. i ‘Arn. "gale :"5 oJa02° beiween § ment, 63 Whitfield, FE 8-1590. . AY nished. EM sain ¢ Pe MY, a ad and new Pontise State Bart Wa, "Mitceday.” on ow p.m, to 8 pm, 7 BM MODERN. BRICK HOME | seein ‘OTTER HILL SUB. sod bail, 8 bedroom dome me wennatilt S12 nett otic, B Paaamtee oe oe MS) . 7 mi. RUSSELL YOUNG. COZY BUNGALOW | Corner lot 161x164 ft., highly re- ; te Oak, . (Newly renovaled) of 7 rooms in. | stricted, lake pfiviléges on two| Perfect condition. full Bastien! obbies & Sappllon 208 2A Laree ene os tena cote \ RooM. ve s oF er an..PS 412_W_ Huron q = 4 Lac geen f bath, “also lakes nly. $1,000 down. space . a. i pe nee X.. te es age © hin ie mile reine et 2 we pvr mya, 6, & earn j bd JARGE ROOM HOUSE, LOTS). W ARM AS TOAST “Page. Oil pentl gen t hot cour. TV ; OFF JOSL YN with 149 car garage gerden wre 4 an emgeere 4 2. PAINT Pontiac \ “pom & iake, all newly dec- i fruit and grapes. offered at $10 , $1. frames |. z hod RN wit - WR BOww. beautiful location, In this ‘cozy home in Pontiac an a. Ser & storms, insula- | Good building site on Judah Lake _ # grapes, offer ¥ B 2 or 3 bedroo m home, jarge ; : — tthoots Hes 8 x. perennial Woodward-Linc ty stloe, Ail for oe ary Only $ ay Eeteies, high} ON ia o . s0' elt bt "ine oe et ee. 1S Rooms, ¥er YATE ano ew.|“ a : . e rms. wi x sec All for : ‘ew jrases to U Iie fs — Sr ee mm - fercmeaas feats | Gar bane Bay omen | “AVON TOWNSHIP ne met ete Tress lade ne eat LES Nodes & Perens 8) Eee | RR at 30800 teday for ap _y Won Knecht, Oe oie enn | Two see nin ss 100x224 nt YOU BUY 1? WELL INSURE IT “os i ee Sedeath eavecrene am macy La URN. APT. PVT. ENT. . *4 hy z . - ead cat .ew— i st , ; VES SHEPARD REAL ¥ = 1 44600; eves. MI] Suter 7 oetrm ack « a Bae oo perry, Know Con dK. Teylor meaner, Mai ran OL 4-151) _s000 Tenken Rd. | Fen gite BY OWNER canis:| WV INDC ROFT. ‘Sus. mre dee = % NEED HELP mes Prive) FE eet. : ~ DRAYTON ON PLAINS _ tian Hills. near Rochester. Large | Ideal home site, 64x296 fn. high | gel oe .. a ss fe aes cae ae ro wits cAsn POR EQUITTES Immediate Possession | tome. a ee or Josetien oo Terms a sour home. Bila ded’ cpereites Rew woke Pore tom Vane : 5 | ' ; : 8: Ruth This house needs your immediate | Months Owner transterted. Large CHURCH ST ITE | REALTY CO. REALTORS | WAT! = &, Betty, Darling. Owner: Duro- ROY KN AUR. Realtor aoe Sy pee Cons Sewesiote ing, drapes, and merms Meads v1 Lot 140x305 ft. corner Mt. Clemens | FE 20265 a SAVE. MONEY" t Deve: ) FE a honey 2 Tart tan bene. Lt extras. r cent mortgage avail-| & Court Dr., paved streets, city 1073 W Huron ae ye = ‘wal &: > i to It's ca’ liv mee able, 436,b00. OL 1-1776. water and sewer, over 42,000 sq. | NEXT DOOR TO BRANCH ash? o F i ota etsy” Mbasbe'h ot |F RMS. FULL stam mageneny | 5.5 tes we bance, Oe | —— Sam &F oe ay on the exterior of the house, In 100 Ft. from Boat Do — kK. G. “HEMPSTEAD | ‘ SPECIAL! | » JERRY rs side We have all cak floors, plas- Late prvi rom Boat Doc lea. Huron St com 8 Tp yo. / BT? ; OF AND CS , read ~meee ; waste. "Priced ‘ai 910,006. "42500 | OR 34081 _ Pome caus | — SELL OR TRADI Fees , Saar fore ser cate. “we [a Ras. CuiuBTiAN COUPLE PvE | ** Tent for -verwneney. - a 'e 10, 1 ; MU 4-5505 OF I ERS o0.000 cyay rooms . IF SO q one aE ots 4 eran % _bath and ent. | ? S’hewme AIR CONDITIV NI 3 BEDROOMS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE | ry vion Area West of Pontiac ee ; ’ FOE SELLING Pros. ‘ Gt om toe PL . oy 9g pees. me a a pe : ~ ie - po eer, pater —_ LEMs. * * ‘ Low Down Payment . ¥ & room modern bungalow housetraiier. or «mall home ss Let US or continuous REAL . ent. 2 bike. “from Beare, $10.40 tinke ue 7 Gee emt Here is a home right in Pontiac | - / ~ om jot 150 x «6 close to or sell with low down pas : ESTA SERVICE. ins A 5 OO a ocraiphgranien om Oy . | Rel he Raowing Metres | sche, eee ie) — Give You! Place to Pa Wi | ae puit™ tte "to NON Oc men ear carage ' . ©*F' "gp tenes ‘ » . ; bedrooms, full basement, automat- , —id excellent terms + Leslie R Middtlet n ate ae OMA HAN E Fase Your Mind - y ~ A. i ia Paiv. ENT 6 8, ~ Bhleiey | THAT WE CAN Prut, THE 1 te oll beat. gas hot water. plas: i . ; | BROKER Fal deerones CEALTY CO. |. c. Been APARTMENTS IMMEDIA tia elena ceteae | ok North Side—Brick (PE se CPE 1.0088 peenwent Restore Credit rs aus. wt LY PORN. Nk. Ws) WEA RE OFPERINO AEE A 3 all “this and only $1209 down on| Suse" clas bearoom ‘pugs, Practically riew 2 bedroom | eel ; ARE NOT A OF Working gitis, oe EXCLUSIVE lows Area) charmer, Very Stinp room eatwrig’ ia} gNO,Down Payment, — 2 sagt, NO ICH ‘apeapea — oe. gue, tate a ‘ as y decorated. Oil ta br Will bulle on yout free # on a ee + . Clarkston Home —, fenc iw, is a picture : ater ueareus ms ial. clear let, 7 i 1 bedroom pe é M IGAN EDIT ] 5 P. ] $a 60 * . Lg Na ed SCBSELLORS apreciated TARE’ nD ee quack sale, tere. Located of 'AEge cor: baild om our ot with small a. ; ND THEATER a ‘ROOM TiHAG.| YOU WILL HAVE vat ner lot. payed street. close | SaW® Bern IAMS LAr? — Se , not vs! i eee AE AT ig UR ay i ; value re- to s¢heeis and bus line PO. . LAs | imorcece | at ‘ res for . gelved when you buy thie $0050, terms. : RD $+ 6 call OR }1238: porsece | ae - — by other | THEIR VALUABLE TIME much oii - or yeni round Adults bret 2 eceroem vengaiew, | amr een OR MR re pe “ = | eteespberraement ot cvator | —"5~"Nogus , yooms of charm. Plastered | /arkston nena | EEE . have enough listings of 2 and 3 &. rd. walls, a Attractive 6 reoth home is S16 OWN : “s - ¥ : Basement Ot bent. kexe > prod, conden Living won ~~ p—Bainy ‘ — __ Travel Agencies . BBA| Please fa _ 5 Fou Fh ee eat, e arage, Pay rive. i Geod tocdtion on § Sanford, he- : CLARK REALTY, 440 0/3" CLEAN Oui PREVA fe back yard. room, ‘arge -att ichen: : — " ATE ey etn den, sametemtial Ie etches) wedreom end Boing re on a ig Oo +" san | PLANNING A TRIP) | Sere eer! Priath * drinking, Adults only. down payment required, full bath down. 2 bedrooms | pai tecemneet oan. ot heat aa =e - 2 € ASH - f al ; ' and iaratory ap. Basement bt water and bailbin |weact ' IN Ey ROOM NEAR POINTIAG : iY 2 pose pond pareery =e sit eee. —. oar tray 10 dats pe seston 24 HOURS vat. init ‘ivate fie “aha & ~Located near school “ a Rk. D. RILEY, Broker iS . one tore uburn, stores and bes, In quiet a + FOERLEA Ts ; : a residential area’ situated on Drayton Plains .- me Ens lake Re | FE +ths a oe : 2 PLEARAWT “CA. teeta #ran0 with 0 | cond mans ce trent | ' | ©. wa re esas to give Ae COM: A vu a wh i % me | gor © , mrge frent # - = * bh 7 - si en a ee Talons tae. | rex full basement, gas Wid. Children | a os erty —— fv. F Acad a. 3 LARGE CLEAN 1 , PRI- reat, stluated on 2 ints to- ; to Board 26, ier . "vate bath ¢ for clean es and insurance. © ' ees 2 @s that are priced taling 100-9 300. 1%) car ~ ane right, ¥ : and no drinkers, 104 8. DRAYTON WOODS-3 bea- xarage with additieral reem ri . oe the A get Paddock. REALTORS pameling "and ree carpeting pait ‘chap. ‘Chose ae Ra Bes! Buys ‘ m0; " ° aeriONn aad ge a Sse ee a ; 7 earpeting ping center. ; ey ae pe epee wae Pe ane ‘ Phone OR 3-1295 ‘both living & dining rm. * ; od < te 3 es NEWL DECORATED, near/Open Eves. “til 9—Sunda: t Wardrobe closets all = Teel : : mn A. Gaintiod eee. o 8. -aning be doors About ts rd $-Family. Furnished T ay ba } Haw. ade, Sto, Realtor Sieh: SOS, seele.. R trees to ‘amily apartmest in et. . @ner NICW Liat ee tise iat | Sekt |SILVER LAKE FRONT mires, tt 0°36 bm. | AEM, Rae Renee a * i - i ; PE EI pes Mg ronsh t) rton $290 DOWN | Eke Bistian S| esate ge Ss | a a a a te RE NEEDED | yu —zg- »prarune_ |" Rov, aes. PE : chines and | , 4 ee : 0 4 Hy 4 : a os $98 @ werk gtom level home - «uh. 2 porches FE “ee = of fF an is ine Hine. vi rs : ieee metres sags tome "aa fe eevee Te, Beet, | RAY O'NEILL, Realtor teome fot ar Wee eie | Sahu! rmm host bout: me Pe we | _ Soc a4 eas ois | pee Bharath wiTler* des jp Mg rag pe “rent - rite full basement, 75: by 220 ft. lots. | 2628 Telegraph ol fie peo ores rest pares large living teem with pic- fe A ¥ Extra large kitchen, tile bath. Phone FE 3-710; * or OR 3-28 tare Wide * overiook ‘ nis “pee. per mosth. QUALITY features throughout, 9 lake thermopane windo® S ere ; vt nag ‘welcome. Model O OR 3.9300 | \ Donelson Park [ig ceramic file baths les ‘wee mr WEST Leslie R. Tripp, Re&itor . con a pen on 8 7 " & ew Attractive T peom come fea- 12 « 14 Kitchen #5h eet a 4 ROOMS & iY ™ BATH, GARAGE, Teste B-Tripn, Restor" aeimvnam tyegat oe TET |S Rane ee SESE Ba mt any doubt?) seis: sss see 5) Es 54161 | or, FE 52059 . . . “reom, all earpeted fooms = a ! s ye mein fieer, fall base 2 = _sttncbed gatege Com- ts — AL FISHER | Sharer Ganeee ec | pata anoomn, can |B agave Seat ohare “hah ( 7 7 19322 James Courens, Detroit, Mich. | Established tn 1916 ty pine inchiding beautiful Never offered at Cys les way ce GG oon emecde: Room . s 37 ___ Diamond 10310 s ne bar and fireplace Attached ee 4 SS ne fou Jou best? Por action t wil een err? | 6 ROOMS ws vt BATH APPLY 4 _ & KITCHE x. 24t. ENT. FURNISHED MACEDAY LAKE = Acrose romt breeteway Fs 2 pred garage ¥ “ call our office HI" ‘ : Sasi Ma. FE 2-0683. from lake, ¢ bedroom, oi) heat Situated Bicely | lane'- iste Pessession | ¢ re g, phowe. | » 20063.' Ready to move in—3 room home fenced yard. 4224 garage, large’ scaped jet es a i. 270 ' Seat 1, Uiiities, | Pat B PHDRSEEEEG,,gROOM, 15) ocied on paved res Reet, | | E%ome “ta tees “HAs Se we eee aca —1—sctvac |! ,BEORM. DELVE price 1 eges go —T bedrm i RM FF WORKING | iG” GIR. = $500 down. Only per terms. Roy Annet Inc. cose wi cute nnd seca © heat & ‘turn Vic, ette a as PE Se COZY BUNGALOW -- All inmuiated, bedroom heme incre hes tet se | Bes mono eee 23) LOVELAND [sess nsec ae orn oe om Eis lr sak nin . TOGMm 5, arge aren —— 3 : aii bath, lar@e kitchen eth GLEAN MODERN —. 12214 f. ving room, Open Byening: & Sun ft te 4+ fon Soe ; “ oR. EFFICIENCY | Orion, _ Br Eos STOP TARDE CEEAR |e scary TN MS MPa ies | fare "W8Bio Mane cores Bs . small tamiy. Only 00S Open ven ire a to | Bhs po Sus! S| Li sees - $55 per month , 5 and small ay pes p BATH & EN-/2 F Multiple Listing Service : . ments Sea cee aethe of cal ,_ FE 2-0006. . ae NEAR DAVISBURG — 2 acres 0 eo el Se cance : Th te gualfied prow onl rriti Poni N Are You Planning fine Uieh setting te Sie 6 some bee ee ie = | ROOMS AND MORI i ished, ign pret beth “a = ison. To Build ? | heat. garage, poultry. house. R. Immediste possesscm sO MTS ; sere S us now. es. We bandle ruone,_Aher t pm. 7E a toe. el oun une ro m.| Begg Eee gene toms om Parneate | aE Rig ME Mey oa ee yee GLEAN WAR ROOMS, PRE VITE YOU TO SEE OUR ‘ "Mod. _ . per Me. | hasaly ® Fabers see family -- © & base . el” all brick 3 bedroom : boarding home. situated on tone .. By month or week. 110 $500 DOWN -— Vacant. well-located | an eer: of nirely. faa: Sane on Green. Sent aici Seman hoe | PONE atc ch | ta mam owes | Eiht, Sa | Me Pb ath ; . ieee FE 21080, SSaitom “built home, "We can This is & geve one. Only 68, $1900 DOWN Dandy 2 nes- reams Bae ee en: |e oe waek Sa = iN, PRIVATE Be ain eue: Reate caring ih | alse entimate pian x. your $500 down. Bal. like rent room heme w Birwicgham fy _— be a. wom oprg® ' ra Clark, days: BL OOMS, choice. We baxemren , at ‘ © one doubie. $16 each. Sin- ai aT detatien Come . : — , ; . 3647 alter 6:30. $16 oe ons 9-6797, financing sod all details, Come | BRICK 4 FAMILY — West sute $3600 DOWN Lately S reom i’ uy Pe . week. ‘ om Orchard is now ond ee see Tg near aah peeatiee on" ae AD es hame in Eiatet) Lane gonreciaied = Brat . -e : , a) Sa __ er ue oo TE 403 = . a ate es > i . ‘ : =o ee . : | faa eoss Goa D Ak for M bath, other 2 & beth. There ts | YY See eS itis 9s Hg ’ ee A . Flynn oa oe also a wry apt. with" batt ) vie ee aoe ee aly . placa 18 33 a | 2 - : ronwisnep tr. FOR pin On L PAR-!,,, A Rete how hope, the toe 6h: Bin - ides # Living Quarters 30 option : ; employed couple only, Pri- te West Side—Brick L conn shape. $18,008 J. A. aylor Edw. M. Sto . 5 : ; en ton iene | Wale, Hear bus line, $16 weekly i owns. baiw, Ab. Stott. Resice ieee remot ; 4 a | Re ag a 3 ladda, ey nch Home. — in 1954 on 2 birh bts oreriock- 4 ‘ = ol og cae g eee =. 7s 4 ‘ ager : eae ; it carp mole room ond ing Hunt Lake. ned AAs +e Pree ‘Pareing MULTIPLE LisTIMG SERVICE inc eee : td, ants © to get cash it the PORN 4 nue wai ; ving. room. ditting 1 t - ee rah. : >. oO Private entrance ~ 7 bearcaree ey ne ghrtasy; | replace, tnge Riches, pats, MULTIPLE Lasrive weNvICE Drayton [lame Area Ee 38 . a Ri Rew a glee of fio S ** A q . . we # ie , ae a oo rage. SIR,000 good terms. owner oe ¢ rouns wp io seat }_Betrewm, ge Secement vat pe Bits Pave. a + fe ent : A fis ntee mederm wy feom. AN : oe: . Bloomfield—Trade FLOYD KENT, Realtor . Site "beat'ang tt ater fall Bitlet 6 "Tye" cna “ia et = ae tae mee gy ts 3200 Dixie Mev. at Telegraph Price just (MNOS with terme, | ee serately 4 res. Git. tot ewe © \ {f §D ‘ deere ge aie sat, bg | MP cubtomee PikainG ") TACOWRS # pets owe se now? ie Seay tanch home with # 2 tents ap for rental. sepanste em. ree oie eee wi, Sees ® Ser eee, A oo, MT OW DN. PAYMENT: | peer shen sere: sot cchoat cones aoe inne an wee : J mn a % ae vere peertiver . : Te ee one 2 ates Water. Pontine Aree \— ¢ ‘ange, rooms Cali tor appaistment. | eualion Aad peices trioe | pe- taxes. This ig a’.eal value. I basement. Ges beat. $850 opavrow pains amma — 9» Boren cen : ! €. Storms amd erreens JOuN | 10 minutes from Ponder, ¢ bed Degrees. Suie ol Baa) ute , : rooms. 1% car attached garage 9%! S81". Hivingy; toom aed WM. A * KINZLER | 242i =" RENNED' é 6 e Area — “sy bed- : / \s rooms Full ——— 5 ae KEN D Sones Regent : . * “Leake priv i 4 ee George RB! ED hee Haron, 8. Hiron valley a orge . rw in eeniia™ - 4.3525 '| 786 MSO: at Pontiac Lake | arom es as ae one inc dale fee. Ao BJ... ——— af ~ a « 4 a ; — ws ian co ely ® . ; ~ ‘ “ aes ahs & \ { et . rT ty, go ° ' a 3 j 4 } “ oe ae! “But, Nancy! Helping one’s mother is a duty — if you; i : of AO ee ed ‘f ts |_barmente, MA tsiet,_____| For Sale Houses 43) For Ao | MACEDAY GARDENS [sy owner, 3 sxorn Plas lacaene: Peaoeet 5. a ; oe : At . y. Batata | fe eine | ar ere wen fee pe MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1 é ; sarang gems] GATEWAYS io] » : an PONTIAC REALTY : OM) Teoms, ooh, poms tart?! BRICK RANCH HOME dining room. ‘Mice, kiteh- . irwin ie | POMC REALTY. “HAPPINESS -| Staite =| aE | et ee] ee ) aes pe wigebed bal | i : are Eee ' ILD or) ast No down : me CHURCH SITE vaun,| LOCATION DELUXE a AMAT 5 “paged city water, sewer, over ot 0a NEAR OAKLAND AVE, Russell Young | Nphries| *'ssearsibe "| ate ae fh eee gw, "Maron Ss : Grcodans | PO, Pa, toncins, Maa, OS S| Pee rere ag te ul aa Econ | ity My tad at | See SEN Halt wil school, Only 7 FL AVON GA DENS SUB.| . . Bi | Iden! building site 100x380 ft. high 5 BEDROOMS ry em water. oan BALDWIN Love. ‘OTTER HILL SUB. aliractive Pg me Corner a re- ae paricges ono pertect condition, full basen OFF JOSLYN wih tia cee ear warden sect Geod ite on Judah Lake . two welt toceted jets 160024 8. | YOU BUY IT WELL INSURE IT! ven ~ngesencenctasategenete ti each, Pa . i water, $1,000. each. : tas: | WINDCROFT SUB. M AH AN 1 ca ea i | Kins Lake Rd, Only $775. 4 iS a, : tat CHURCH SATE meATPE 20063 An a s. down Redroom home. “ese a5 8 pin. | NEAR ST. PREDS . $9,500 : 140x305 ft, corner mens ‘« : = ’ es. we ras. Court Dr, paved sirects, cit 10% Ww. Hw and semtfinished attic ol | lovely kitchen, modern bath, out-| Only $3,000 4 | © Beton Rtogieeete | tue ob Ge 8 Seer tes | nextel Seite | EX meee eee Seinen cecal! eee cemearen| RP eeacmes a Vee. Eran one "Mis Rote er noms | WY CTE MPSTEAD Sean at el So | Fe a | En) ee ne 100 Ft. from Boat Dock © * “ya &. | ra a + h JE . ADA ~ enh, oh book fo, | “tered tall, carpeted ining oom Lake privileges on Union and Long | FE call © Ee story! Getty ‘moderna’ located ott | 3113 W. ture re s-asie| MORON SARDENS, SoROALOw. eg ene 2a ~ rarase. Choe fo schonls Ww svuanay® room. 3 bedrooms and 2 bedrm... large living rm. South, Bird, in Cone Bub, Ss =| thle five soem meters bungalve | tne bedrooms, large living rogm diye, Reasonable down pay- : th int hearin s| ieee ees a] ANNE TT | fee TR Eo cere eer ~gib950° CHS i, ‘Seana are shy bot werer ‘WaLiRt ® 1 p - | Sa pood basemomt, dandy ‘Sear | OUTSIDE, Crry | - SEL ; ; vy 2car Newly Ff - Wall | creas aes ore Ala onvers Bee : | ee Se earers| ee OR} 7 : es ; , #, itn low down - | = BEDROOMS MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE [Drayton Area. West of Pontisc, Wil take | BIO ENOUGH se small img ; : * ses er Ee cata is | _. Low Down Payment m7 S rosin modern bungalow |. Bousetraller, or small home For cena ee eect s| , VE BUY SELL @ TRAbe : |) vase . ge is a home Pontise ‘ oe. tot BOP 0) Clee to | | OF Sa WHE tee eeen per bedroom home~expansion attic; poRRIs & SON REALTORS on 2 te ni ag rea: 3 NE, a Ge eicaee. goes. EE ‘ settee sinacd and shrovbea | St emee Pe +1887 ' vey, - sg | be : feel be ne et wpe. Das fh . exellent terms, Leslie R. Middleton oe. vg stepseving then, | MULTIPLE Listine servicw |"™ If’ Youyn comet and Blair Realty ¥ | . od eee North Side—Brick rece Pe tem) fl tenement ee ce siiee. ; | Open Eves & Sun. Res. FE 5-256 | $438 Dixie Hey, OR 31201 ‘ and bane SS Sse tee Practically new 2. bedroom : garage. Price? Only $11.09. | $1,500 Down MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE _ | ” DRAYTON PLAINS —__ “@ © i. Woe, Ares) charmer, Very pr ig NoDown Payment |Wesrsipe |. | Mbedroom home ia the we: |A REAL NICE HOME UNION LAKE ~ if og CLUSIVE , . x24 living Foom with riek wis bund on pour free one on firet fider end expasiaion Connell district. The WITH 3 BEDRMS. — For only $500 you can own heat, planter, bedrooms 12x12, Cee ne tuk fun tase. ” Catpeted living and din- busy mother will appreciate a : . aus cosy lor 2 = Bronce "ease bent,vene:| arse gman pfu eee; |e rooms fal basemen wit | Sat Gath andise fog | AND 2 FIREPLACES || sotcco wee. ‘Setaat te ser ingore nce ee | So” part fans rooD seed giaton, Cash to oo heat, ull price #00—be rn “Bel ce. tum: | foees a; Water- Seve e| Pee | ELS) oe Se sareree fl) x Clarkston IP BEWITCHING! St. Benedict's beth, handy closets ge-| EMBREE & GREGG Ei Altractive § room home in $1,000 DOWN “pois 4 bedroom home situated| — igu"ur'S rooms and ba scaped. Ownet trensierred. A. bar- "Onion ‘Lake ‘Village. ex condition. Living room , on 75'x125° lot in Pioneer High-| ruil basement with panel gain at $17,900 with $6,900 down, | EM 3-4303 } feats “ween fireplace, @itins | cece jocatee cee sanford, ben| teach tm Ge features © | ‘recreation room. Deleo oll | .¢¥+ " we T room, Jaree, cating ,2Pace | living Tm. dining rm. & bichon gt eg A ee Giroux-Franks: 7 BDRM RANCH STYLE BOWOA- | ag Ny 9 een. neu. eepir| puaivareem wees =| A) | with “on steam “hest, 2 carl Sig, B. Racer | family will Jove “See, satertie 4-Bedroom Brick + Hay pacha OR sr, large, tet, ear Ste Wetertord i be darees: siioos, terms | TH RILEY, Broker | ene tate privileges too! Priced | fine’ family home hae ive | a fin Lyarte tamer On'sasie'sfes =| ye Drayton Plains ; $00 Eliz. Lake aan Pe 411675" yet a with $6,000 down. ing i. ue = we Bypo-v Ce <= FIRST OFFERING ~ ae ae NeW FER da . » & : room - . ie Fg BB hg STOUT'S prick LAKEFRONT BEAUTY ai Jedras, up Pull, basement. oS tee Pedrooms, me rive. Attractive. Foor } | Keak anted gp 2 ite “er Cet Sik" wate" ants: | Sew ROR aeea wrapee | Sein ac tad ams: |. fant SRE Kem | ™ farege with adaitionel” room pi Toa bathe, ‘lefloored entrances | Where cam you beat this for onan, SO Set Ravenbers, it | how being used for TV re- ; 5° room. ‘| $14,800, ee N + : Shores") BestBuys | tavimiis' ma" ARNOLD REALTY | . ping center 3 Today | ee Oa sees a, US | Seminole: Hills FE soe sone § Tieerems Pe 3073 8 oe 8-8 Bi oe? tire $Family, Furnished a. Water sports later yout Fait nome acer tearms, FOR COLORED 1}? eee | fof ine tjeny satacutnl seeten | SILVER LAKE FRONT| “tS Bedrooms and "st bate tp. | Survey Zul basement, 3 ces w $290 DOWN Te better vane st |S mck, auigmatic pas. best, Beiteee oot inn om | Leslie R. Tripp, Realtor | S°™Getute’ se, plastered $s, Tee, oe ewe. ALES ) seassic s mame S| Raita ai tre ad] Bh Got uta potas | pain” "PE sie] Havanese | aoujerON REALTY pte ph ow gaat | RAY O'NEIL, Realtor fheome. Lot x 170 with each yp oe Betting on en extra large =| C. HOUSTON REALTY to basement, 75 7 ame fe tots 262 8, bs Open 8 BF — large 1 room with ple- : lot, It invites ve : - DB | a Entra. taree tuchen, tie bats: | Phone PE SMG ot OR Samsd as w | OME wind ee overtgting | : a ha ea Said ae sem —_——— : iedel Coen OR 2 PAge Donelson Park. - i ceramic tile betha, ise. : : abs ae | 2 Pe glao S os Attractive 7 room home fea- 12 x 14 kitchen with cer- : ¥, Acre - EN oe | | & : turing fireplace in living; Amie tile, — Ispacious bed: Corner parcel with immacu- COLOBED mile -3 Ra. 3 : room, all frooms rooms, rimeter heat. Lee ‘ jate 2 bedroom brick home, wos , 2 t room. _ sil carpeted, Tuomis | Scat atte oe ; dreom srick home, ONLY § Lerr Be LP es) | ae 1: Seti Down ?P Deling and ttapen inhaded igen ny ey thts brick, F ae t Dar and oe, Attached Fond enddgh rec. fall Fee ateent ate ees fares are 2 fir ex | «3 BEDROOM Hone at . - + erm. ee hk antine ce excellent ‘elghborbood 2 a 3 “bearoom ranch in the fia teen, and tDrick gee Pome” wan al Roy Annett Inc. | Near Auburn Heights | Psmtet pieces ga (SSiacwsa Bice Gate | MONTHLY Parnemwers HW _ Season BO oe ees og aa Ai sseineee~'rbmens . | WM. H. KNUDSEN cat Gpen Evenings & Sun. 1 toe spe Para on a mem «| 0 Ponting State Bank Bide. | gaeetersece | pooms axp store pr ee ssseecna cs ‘BUD! Hh ‘B Tamedte ae, ROOMS mnee eeeyits Kampsen J . | ore Oh Parkdate st, aes acion ee ae ; Minty re on REALTORS” FE 40528 on Park Sub. Delore you ey — or eh. | Servant NICHOLIE| Skates Sreeace || - i]. A. Taylori x. oe Geueed Ave, Cone es | MOLE